The largest adjustment for Keyclone to IS Boxer (for me at least), was understanding the difference between Repeater and Keymaps.
IS Boxer has both.
In Keyclone, you effectively have Repeater on the whole time, but can blacklist certain keys to do nothing (or alternatively whitelist certain keys, so only those are broadcast). You could play exactly the same with IS Boxer if you wanted.
But the default is to play with Repeater off most of the time, and to created Mapped Keys for the stuff you want broadcast.
A mapped key is a very strong tool.
It can broadcast to every window but the current, meaning you can accomplish independent slave movement, while retaining the default keybindings in warcraft on all accounts.
You can target only your melee toons, for something like IWT.
A mapped key will mostly be keybinds (hotkeys) with a key or macro action within warcraft; but they can do a lot more such as turn on or off (or toggle) another mapped key, etc.
So, you'd ideally want to play with Key Maps (groups of mapped keys) on, but repeater off, for 95% of your play time.
You would enable Repeater (Keyboard/Mouse) when you wanted everyone to click the same thing at once.
You would disable Keymaps and enable Repeater when you wanted everyone to type and not have Mapped Keys get in the way (ie, entering your password on all screens at once).
Pretty much, once you get used to the separation of Keymaps from Repeater, it gives you a lot more power then straight Repeater (Broadcast) on all the time.
TLDR; You're correct, Kang.
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