Big Bright Easy-See Yellow Keyboard Review — The Highest-Contrast Pick
| Contrast & Visibility | 9.8 |
|---|---|
| Build Quality | 8.5 |
| Value | 9.5 |
A full-size, no-frills keyboard with massive black letters on bright yellow keys — designed for users with severe contrast sensitivity issues like macular degeneration or post-cataract recovery.
$14.03
Description
Quick Specs
| Layout | Full size, 104 keys |
| Legend Style | Black on bright yellow, oversized |
| Backlight | None |
| Switch Type | Standard membrane |
| Connection | USB-A wired |
| Tactile Markers | F, J |
| Compatibility | Windows, macOS, Chrome OS, Linux |
Source: Manufacturer published specifications
The Big Bright Easy-See looks like something a science teacher might pull out of a supply closet. Bright yellow keys. Massive black letters that practically shout at you from across the desk. It’s not subtle. It’s not pretty. And for people with severe contrast sensitivity issues, it’s quite possibly the most useful keyboard on the market.
Here’s the thing about low vision — it’s not always about losing sharpness. For conditions like macular degeneration, cataracts, and diabetic retinopathy, the bigger problem is contrast sensitivity. The eye can still see shapes, but it can’t distinguish similar shades from each other. Standard white-on-gray keycap text just disappears. The Big Bright fixes that with the highest-contrast color pairing the human eye can register: black on yellow. It’s the same logic used on highway warning signs and emergency exit markers.
The letters aren’t stickers. They’re molded into the keycaps themselves, which means they will literally never wear off. I rubbed one with isopropyl alcohol for three minutes straight and it looked the same as before. That alone puts the Big Bright ahead of half the cheap “large print” keyboards floating around online.
Typing feel is fine. Standard membrane switches, slightly clickier than the Perixx, with proper F/J tactile bumps. Plug-and-play USB — no drivers, no software. Works on Windows, Mac, Chrome OS, Linux. Compatible with JAWS, NVDA, and every other major screen reader because it registers as a generic USB HID device.
The big tradeoff is the lack of backlight. In a brightly lit room this keyboard is unmatched. In a dim room, the yellow keys go gray and the legibility advantage evaporates. So if your usage is mostly evening or nighttime, the Perixx is a better call. If your workspace is well-lit, the Big Bright wins on contrast.
Verdict
The Big Bright Easy-See is a specialist tool. It’s not the keyboard for everyone — it’s the keyboard for someone whose contrast sensitivity has dropped enough that normal large-print boards aren’t cutting it anymore. For that user, it’s a lifesaver. Plus it’s the cheapest accessibility keyboard on our list, so trying one isn’t a financial risk.

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