Not necessarily. 2KRO means that there is at least one key combination of three keys that would not be possible without ghosting. It does not preclude that there are possible key combination with more keys at once.
derzemel wrote: Some electronic keyboards actually have 2 switches under each key and they calculate how fast you press each key.
I think that is the norm. Let me continue to illustrate further:
A clavier key is a lever so when you press it, different parts of the key will reach different depths at a given angle. A switch at the front of the key will therefore reach actuation distance before a switch further up will. The construction is therefore very simple: all switches can be one a single PCB or membrane.
An actual piano requires that you press a key with a certain speed to make a sound - if you press a key too slowly, it will be quiet.
There are some vintage keyboard switches that actuate different key signals at different key depths.
Topre's capacitative sensing is also able to read travel, and therefore speed. They have shown a prototype QWERTY keyboard that could be put in MIDI mode and played with speed sensing.
BTW, on older musical programs for computers there has been a convention where the QWERTY keys are white keys in one octave with the numeric row black keys. Then the ZXCV keys are white keys in another octave with ASDGF being its black keys.