I know but you could still use novelty keys instead of language specific (and grab the ISO enter anyway).
The options were: have 1 kit per language and see only few tipped, have just 2 or 3 big language kits and have all tipped.
It might be useful to know what languages the kits break into if people want to buy one in the hope they can split it and country-specific ones off? I'm assuming some of the languages have overlap in keys used.
[)amien
I supose they have redundant keys included in the two groups: DE, IT, FR and NO, SW, FI, DK, ES, UK however neither was a good fit for my needs. I write in American and UK English, Spanish, and French, using an ANSI keyboard with international english, and I found only one useful key in the first group, and two in the second. So I did not find a good reason to spend $31 for two keys.
Maybe next time a common international kit, plus language specific ones could be defined. It may be too hard, though. Or they may not reach MOQ, so it does not seem to be an easy solution.