I found out that the seller for this board was in my neck of the woods, so I went and picked one up after work that I'd ordered from their outlet website. It's remarkably stiff to type on, and the keyboard has no feet. The spacebar is very steep as well, but overall I'm kinda digging it. Definitely not plug-and-play; had to reboot when I plugged it in, and I definitely need to flip the spacebar, since it's like mountain climbing when all the other keys are so low-profile. I may do a review of this once I get some typing time in, but I'm so used to reds that this thing really is straining my fingers, and I was on buckling springs before reds.
As other people have said, the spillguard is a joke and gums up the switches. Had to remove the casing, which is textured plastic mixed with metal plates to hold the screws inside, and a solid aluminum (I think) backplate with 8 screw points. This thing is very solidly built despite the wobbly feel you get with it resting on the rear plate screws without a mat. Between the PCB and backplate screws, there are 15 in total holding the thing together, which is really sturdy for such a tiny board.
Overall, this looks to be a great trainer for a KBC Pure or whatever the new one is with blues or browns. I now have reds and blacks in my collection, and am eager to try a CM Storm to see how blues feel, but may wait if the KBCs are available.
No stabilizers on the spacebar, but it doesn't need them: there are two points on the side where the spacebar attaches, along with the middle one over the actual gray-colored switch. It is hideously vertical, though, which I intend to fix now.
Edit: Flipping the spacebar makes the board about 10 billion times more comfortable to type on; it's now a gentle slope instead of Everest, and requires much less force to actuate. You don't need to **** around with any paperclip-frail wire thing or reposition the sockets on either side like I've heard described with the Filcos; just lever up one side, pull it up and away from the board, then lever up the other, flip, and voila! The right shift is a little tough to get used to, being half-width, but I'm sure I'll grow to expect the repositioned keys.
I may post a full review that's basically this post with some terrible cameraphone shots if need be.