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Why are there so many ANSI keyboards, and very few ISO?

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I've been following the community for a while, and there have been just a few ISO keyboards. And those who were for sale didn't match my expectations.
Am I the only one looking forward for an ISO keyboard?
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TeribleGramar
17
Jul 8, 2017
Yeah, i wanted to buy those sea themed keycaps, but it seems that big boards ar so rare that it is not even worth the hassle to try and find one for a somewhat reasonable price outside of md.
TeribleGramar
17
Jul 8, 2017
TeribleGramarActually i would be even fine with full size ansi, not just iso, but i can not even find those, at least not for 140 usd.
golden_bull_95
75
Jul 7, 2017
popularity issue I guess, since ANSI is the more popular one and somehow lots of people dislike the larger enter key (I don't but my dad and uncles seem to really hates them ). And molding might also be a small reason as well (for keycap and plate) some unsual size/shape might doesn't fit well in mass production (the enter key is the prime example)
TheOtherDave
40
Jul 5, 2017
Maybe it's because so many of these custom layouts focus on making the keyboard more compact, and the ISO return key is comparatively huge? But in nearly every drop, the best-selling kits are just "base + modifiers", so clearly a lot of people are buying them for "regular" keyboards. Or maybe it's that double-shot caps are popular here, and the molds for the ISO return key are extra expensive and designers can get more bang for their buck by supporting "custom" layouts with simpler key shapes like the Planck or Ergodox?
Not being a keycap set designer, I really don't know.
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