I've spent some time playing Starcraft 2 on blacks... not ideal (as much as I love
typing on blacks). Though probably comparatively good for the Lost Viking minigame (where you also want anti-ghosting and flawless rollover among the arrow keys and the spacebar, which is the reason why I pulled out a black Cherry in the first place). For the rest, I somehow feel better on a tactile board, though maybe not necessarily a buckling spring. Blue is kinda good. I imagine brown would be even better. (I suppose Model F would be better still.

)
Oh, and you might just swap keyboards for when you decide to squeeze the juice out of the Lost Viking achievements. I can't imagine doing Gold (500K points) with arrow keys getting ghosted by the spacebar, which is what happens to me... haven't tried on my new Filco Tenkeyless blue, though.
I think it is based of their inherent designs of each switch and what is the most common types of key presses in each genre of game (push and hold, double tap, quick release, release then press before letting the key come to rest, etc.). Some switches are better suited for different types of key pressing.
Mostly I think it comes down to personal preference and what you are comfortable with TBH though.
There are differences between players and player skill levels in those areas, as far as RTS goes, actually. The typical player will mostly want to be sure he registers the keys but those 200 APM kids could probably appreciate fast reset and resistance tweaks and could perhaps possibly feel the difference in response times to some extent. Many players will want to be sure they hit the right key without activating a different one by accident, e.g. by a not so finely targeted hand or finger move, where actually low-profile scissors keys could be the best, plus they do provide some feedback and they aren't that bad for tapping, either. Chances are the scissors could inflict noticeably less fatigue on the fingers over several hours of high-APM-style intense use of shortcuts, but I'm speculating.