Yes, sorry about that. I meant length to engage.

I had red switches. I also have a mechanical keyboard with red switches.

You won’t find many people who complain about accidentally pressing keys on cherry red keyboards. That’s because there is a decent sized length to engage.

Again, I would say for sensitivity, you want to go with Sanwa OBSF-30 (stock on most premium commercial sticks). Those are the nearest to a feather trigger I’ve found.

If you want sound dampening, go for these. They are probably the most sensitive out of all of them. But I honestly would take out the foam and put in an o-ring instead. The muddy feel comes from bottoming the button out and hitting the foam. With an o-ring, you still bottom out, but you hit silicon and that feel of bottoming out is not as muddy and shorter-lived. I’m sure hitting silicon isn’t as quiet as hitting foam, but I believe that it’s still pretty quiet and is a better trade-off. You can find a youtube video comparison of mechanical keyboards with and without o-rings installed.

These are the o-rings I used. I used them for my lit keyboard and LED lights pass through still. These fit on the button caps but stretch a little.

eBay 240pcs Keycap Rubber O-Ring Switch Dampeners White For CHERRY MX Free Shipping ... 240pcs Keycap Rubber O-Ring Switch Dampeners White For CHERRY MX Free Shipping. | eBay!

edit: Also, the plastic used in these is ridiculously hard. The plastic is not light or remotely cheap feeling as a Sanwa. They’re more along the lines of the plastic used in Seimitsu clears, probably even more dense/high quality. This I think can also contribute to “feels” as the button is ever so slightly heavier to press.

edit2: The only way I think to correct the length to engage is to somehow have the cherry switch partially depressed at neutral, which I don’t think is feasible to manufacture or engineer into at this moment.

edit3: To be honest, I don’t think I’m being fair. So I’m going to give these buttons more time and report back. But so far these are my first impressions (after being so used to Sanwa).