Once you have mastered the basics, try these advanced techniques inside Tezarre Keyboard Software:
Because Tezarre logs keyboard input to function, privacy is a valid concern. According to the developer’s white paper:
You should still avoid using Tezarre on public computers or shared workstations where you enter passwords—not because the software is malicious, but because a local administrator could potentially access your macro logs. Tezarre Keyboard Software
The interface is functional but dated—reminiscent of early AutoHotkey IDEs. New users may find the terminology (“layer stack,” “hook precedence,” “key blocking policy”) intimidating. However, advanced users will appreciate:
Documentation is community-driven and solid for common use cases (e.g., remap Caps Lock to Ctrl+Shift+Esc). Less common features like “chording” or “ephemeral layers” lack clear examples. Once you have mastered the basics, try these
After spending two weeks testing Tezarre Keyboard Software across writing, coding, and gaming scenarios, the conclusion is clear: For anyone who touches a keyboard more than 2 hours a day, it is an indispensable tool.
The free version offers 10 macros and 2 profiles—enough to get addicted. The premium "Creator" license ($29) removes all limits and unlocks the layer system. Compared to the lost time and increased RSI risk from repetitive mouse usage, $29 is a bargain. You should still avoid using Tezarre on public
Rating: 9.2/10 Pros: Unmatched speed, intuitive UI, powerful layering. Cons: Slight learning curve for conditional logic; kernel driver occasionally flags on Defender.
| Section | Function | |---------|----------| | Key Map | Visual grid of your keyboard layout | | Layers | Switch between Layer 0 (default), 1, 2, 3 | | Macro Editor | Record/edit macro sequences | | Lighting | RGB effect controls (if hardware supports) | | Profiles | Save/load configuration sets | | Settings | Firmware update, language, latency mode |