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If you haven't been tainted by the mechanical keyboard hobby, be aware.
I started with a TKL with Outemu blue switches just to see what the hype was about, then moved to Anne Pro 2 with Gat browns.
Ortholinear made sense so I got an XD75 followed my a Planck after getting curious about 40% boards.
Now I make my own from printed PCBs and soldering, custom programmable firmware, and my own custom key map.
I now use a split column staggered 34 key board with hand dyed keycaps and custom aftermarket switches.
I own 7 boards now and have plans for at least 2 more and a partial split for gaming.
I'm sincerely confused as to why you would want more than one keyboard. To me it sounds like owning more than one printer, but even less convenient. Can you explain it to me?
Not OP, but personally I own 4 or 5 different keebs and I like swapping between them for different reasons. Sometimes it's just because they're different colors/lighting options and I want to switch up the look of my desk, other times it's because I want the feel of a linear switch for long bouts of typing for the feel of a blue switch for precise feedback in gaming.
I think of it like knives in a kitchen. Yes, you could just use a very nice chef's knife, but knives come in all shapes and sizes for different applications.