Honest verdicts. Cited sources.
Editorial verdicts paired with live Amazon ratings, curated reviewer verdicts (each video linked), and Reddit community sentiment. Sources are disclosed per review.
How we score
Each review surfaces three independently-confidenced signals: live Amazon US rating (scraped directly), reviewer verdicts (per-video score, each linked), and Reddit sentiment(sample threads, sentiment word — not a numeric rating). We don't fabricate numbers we can't cite.
Showing 45 reviews

Akko 3098B Review — A Quietly Excellent 96% Wireless Board That Reviewers Keep Calling 'Tank-Like'
Two scored tech-media reviews and four substantive Reddit threads land on the same picture: the Akko 3098B is a heavy, foam-packed, 96% tri-mode wireless board with surprisingly good Jelly White switches and PBT keycaps for ~$110. Where it stumbles: Tom's Hardware flagged the bundled software as antivirus-flagged, several owners want missing Home/End/PrtScr keys, and RGB customization is shallow. It's the budget productivity keeb that mostly delivers.

Asus ROG Azoth Review — Asus's First Real Enthusiast Keyboard, With an OLED Gimmick That Actually Works
PC Gamer scored it 90/100. TechRadar called it 'one of the best mechanical keyboards you can buy.' Reddit owners are the most surprised — most expected gamer marketing, got a gasket-mounted, pre-lubed, hot-swap 75% with insane battery life. The Armoury Crate software is the universally panned weak link, and $250 is a lot for a keyboard, but the build is the real deal.

Aula F75 MAX Review — The $70 Screen-and-Knob Keyboard That Actually Justifies Its Hype
The F75 MAX is the F75 with a TFT screen, a metal knob, and the knob module's wobble fixed. Owners on r/MechanicalKeyboards keep calling it the 'budget king'; the published Medium and XiaomiToday reviews agree the build is solid and the Leobog Reaper switches sound great. The flaws are real but small: the knob can still slip, the TFT software is basic, the BT spec is old. For $70 with gasket mount + tri-mode wireless + a screen, very little else competes.

Aula F75 Pro Review — The Viral $70 Budget Board That's Mostly Great, Sometimes a Lemon
The Aula F75 series went viral on TikTok and Amazon BSR for one reason: gasket-mount, hot-swap, tri-mode wireless, five layers of foam, and Leobog Reaper switches for around $70. Owner sentiment on r/MechanicalKeyboards and r/BudgetKeebs is overwhelmingly positive ('thock-fest', 'budget king'). The QC is the catch — Sypnotix's reviewer literally couldn't finish their review unit because of double-letters and key misfires. Buy at retail, not blind.

Aula F99 Pro Silent Review — A 96% Mech That Actually Earns the 'Office-Quiet' Label
The Silent variant of Aula's best-selling F99 swaps in pre-lubed silent linears and a five-layer foam stack to land at ~39 dB peak vs. ~62 dB for a normal mechanical. Owners on r/MechanicalKeyboards keep ranking the F99 Pro family above their previous Logitech MX boards. The trade-offs are real: small selfish-key F99 layout quirks, thin English-language review coverage on the Silent SKU specifically, and Aula's usual software polish gap.

Aula F99 Wireless Review — The $69 96% Tri-Mode That's Quietly Become Aula's Best-Seller
The F99 Wireless is the cheap, hot-swap, gasket-mount 96% mech that 1,000+ buyers a month and 2,800+ Amazon reviewers can't stop. Reddit owner sentiment is overwhelmingly positive: 'better than my Monsgeek M1V3 HE,' 'I'm blown away how good it feels,' 'one way trip, no looking back.' The 96% layout will fight you for a week, the software is basic, and yes, there's QC roulette like the rest of the Aula family — but at $69 with this spec sheet, very little competes.

Aula WIN60 HE Review — A $40 Hall-Effect 60% That Genuinely Brings Wooting Tech To The Bottom Of The Market
The whole reason Hall-effect keyboards exist in the budget tier in 2026 is that boards like the Aula WIN60 HE delivered Wooting-class features (adjustable actuation, rapid trigger, 8000Hz polling) at ~25% of Wooting's price. The 126-upvote r/BudgetKeebs build thread is the canonical owner endorsement; the SchmusOperator MK collection thread (45 upvotes) added a hobbyist-tier nod. The cons are exactly what you'd expect at $40: light ABS keycaps, hollow-feeling case, spacebar stab rattle, and the budget HE switches (Leobog Greywood / Aula Wing Chun) aren't yet as refined as Lekker. As an entry to magnetic switches, it's the price-feature king.

Gazzew Boba U4T Review — The Sharpest, Thockiest Modern Tactile, and the One Most Builders Quote First
The U4T is the rare modern tactile that hit the market and stayed at the top. Switch and Click ranks the bump 'one of the most tactile feeling switches on the market.' YouTube reviewers gave it 10/10 on weighting. Reddit's most-upvoted U4T thread sits at 3,500+ upvotes — and the criticism in it is real: a vocal minority finds the bump too aggressive.

Drop + MT3 Susuwatari Review — The Soot-Sprite Keycaps That Sound as Good as They Look (Mostly)
Susuwatari is the keycap set that proves MT3 Cherry-alternative profile can sell as well as GMK. Sculpted, deep-dished, doubleshot ABS, designed by Matt3o, sold in-stock at Drop instead of as a group buy. Reddit owners describe an 'old typewriter vibe.' The catches: photos overstate the visual contrast vs. real life, the MT3 sculpt is polarizing, and the set runs ~$130 on a profile that takes a week to acclimate to.

Ducky One 3 Review — Built Like a Tank, Sounds Like a Typewriter, Fights You on Software
Three years in, the Ducky One 3 is still the consensus answer to 'I want a Cherry MX board built to last 10 years.' PC Gamer scored it 88, GamesRadar called it 'one of the best-looking gaming keyboards I've had my hands on,' and Tom's Guide called it the best typing experience they'd tested — then docked it for no wireless, no software, and tedious macro recording. The flaws are real, the Quack Mechanics platform is real, the hot-swap is real.

Durock V2 Stabilizers Review — The Default Upgrade Everyone Mods Anyway
Durock V2 screw-in stabilizers are the most-recommended stabs in the hobby because they are cheap, available, and easy to find — not because they are flawless. Tech-media writeups call them 'fan favorite' that 'perform well after simple mods,' Reddit threads document just as much spacebar rattle as praise, and the universal verdict is: buy them, then plan to lube and band-aid mod them. They're a 20-minute upgrade, not a drop-in fix.

Womier SK80 Review — A $50 75% Screen-Keyboard With A Real Color Display, Sold Under An Aliasing Brand
First a brand correction: this product is the **XVX/Womier SK80**, not Epomaker (the BSR audit captured the SKU under a generic 'Epomaker / SK family' label that's wrong; Amazon listing ASIN B0C9ZJHQHM ships from Womier, sometimes co-branded XVX). What it actually is: a 75% wired hot-swappable mechanical keyboard with a small color GIF/info display in the upper right, gasket mount, pre-lubed switches, and PBT keycaps for ~$50. The Womier SK80 Pro is the wireless variant. Coverage is thin — only one substantive English long-form review and a few smaller pieces — but the product is real and the screen is real.

Aula F2088 Typewriter Review — The $40 Round-Keycap Aesthetic Buy That Knows What It Is
The Aula F2088 doesn't pretend to be the best typing keyboard at $40 — it's a steampunk-typewriter aesthetic SKU with round chrome keycaps, rainbow backlight, and clicky blue switches. Reviewers and owners agree on the exact same trade-off: looks gorgeous on camera, sounds like 'starting a campfire with flint' (a real owner quote), and the round keycaps take getting used to. As an aesthetic-driven secondary keyboard for writers and content creators, it works. As your daily driver for Slack-heavy work, it doesn't.

Gateron Oil King Review — The Heavy Linear That Built a Reputation on 'Best Stock Switch'
Three years after release, the Oil King is still the linear most enthusiasts cite when they say 'I don't want to lube anything.' ThereminGoat called the factory lube 'impressively consistent.' YouTube reviewers gave them 'one of the deepest sounding switches I've reviewed.' Reddit owners describe them as smooth, marbly, and quiet. The catches are real: a faint stock 'tick,' a slow break-in week, and a colorway that destroys RGB.

Gateron Yellow Review — The 'Budget Endgame Linear' That Keeps Topping Sales Charts Six Years In
ThereminGoat called them 'a cornerstone of the budget option.' Reddit calls them 'the GOAT.' Gateron's monthly sales numbers keep agreeing — Milky Yellows are still in the top tier of best-selling switches in 2026. They're 50g linear, factory-lubed, ~$0.30/switch, and the consensus answer to 'what's a good first linear that I won't immediately want to replace.'

Glorious Padded Keyboard Wrist Rest Review — The $20 Default That Holds Up Surprisingly Well
Glorious's padded wrist rest is the cheapest credible option in the hobby and has been for nearly a decade. Switch and Click's three-year long-term review found 'we found the durability to quite impressive,' a Reddit long-term review flagged the neoprene cover as 'less breathable than nylon, but less sticky than Grifiti' — and the consensus, including from Glorious's own community giveaway thread (60 upvotes, 347 comments), is that this is the right product if you want ergonomic relief without spending more than your keycap set cost. The catch: shipping damage is a real risk, the foam compresses over time, and the logo is loud.

GMK CYL Olivia Review — The Group-Buy Classic Everyone Knows by Sight, and Why It Keeps Coming Back
Olivia is the keycap set most-requested on r/MechanicalKeyboards photo posts and the one that reliably runs additional rounds. The pink-cream-black palette, doubleshot ABS construction, and Cherry-profile feel are signature. The downsides are real: GMK group-buy timelines are notoriously slow, ABS shines fast, and prices have crept up significantly across rounds.

GMMK Pro Review — The Keyboard That Mainstreamed Gasket Mount, and Then Got Old
In 2021, the GMMK Pro was a sensation: $169 barebones, $349 prebuilt, gasket mount, hot-swap, full aluminum, 75% layout — Tom's Hardware called it 'lots of high-end features.' Five years later, the verdict is more sober. Tom's Guide (2024 update): 'the build quality just isn't good enough for the premium price.' GOAT stabilizers were universally panned. The GMMK Pro launched a category and was then surpassed in it. At $48-$179 in 2026, it's a deal. At list, it's not.

Grovemade Wood Wrist Rest Review — A Hard Wrist Rest That Most Reviewers Don't Hate
Grovemade's wrist rest replaces squishy memory foam with hand-sanded hardwood and a leather inlay. Tools and Toys, Cool Material, and AppleInsider all converge on the same finding: 'despite not being pliable, the wrist rest is very comfortable.' It's a $75-$95 desk-aesthetic purchase that happens to also be ergonomic. The catch: it's hard, it's heavy, and at this price you're paying for craftsmanship and patina, not orthopedic engineering.

Redragon K580 VATA Review — A Tom's Hardware-Approved $60 Macro Board That's Aged Surprisingly Well
Tom's Hardware reviewed the K580 VATA with the headline 'Budget Doesn't Mean Bad' and that's still the right framing five years later. Aluminum top plate, 5 macro keys with onboard memory, dedicated media controls, edge RGB, switch options including hot-swap-style optical (Pro variant). The base K580's switches are fully soldered Outemu MX-clones; the K580 Pro variant uses Outemu opticals which break standard hot-swap assumptions. 4.2K Amazon reviews and a long Reddit tail of 'modded my K580' posts.

Redragon K673 Pro Review — A Tom's-Guide-Praised $60 Tri-Mode 75% That Replaces Most Premium Boards
Tom's Guide titled their review 'You don't need any other keyboard for less than $70' and they're not wrong. The K673 Pro / Ucal Pro is the third or fourth generation of a Redragon wireless 75% line that has methodically picked up gasket mount, knob, tri-mode, and pre-lubed switches across revisions. MacSources scored it 90%. Bryan Thinks called it 'an absolute steal.' Reddit's review-and-sound-test thread (6 upvotes, but from a respected channel) is bullish. The catch: it's not hot-swap on the base K673 Pro (the K673 Max revision adds it), and the wider Ucal lineup naming is confusing.

Kailh Box Jade Review — The Loudest Mechanical Switch You Can Buy, and Proudly So
Switch and Click calls them 'the loudest switch you can get anywhere.' Reviewers gave the click sensation 10/10. Reddit's most-upvoted Box Jade thread is literally titled 'It should be a crime to use Box Jades or Box Navies in an office' (2,735 upvotes). The thick clickbar, sharp tactile event, and infamous office-disrupting volume are the entire point — buy them with eyes open.

Keychron K8 Max Review — The Safe TKL Wireless Pick That Tom's Guide Calls 'Editor's Choice'
Tom's Guide gave the K8 Max its Editor's Choice award; MakeUseOf called it 'absolutely perfect' for casual customization. The K8 Max is the unflashy, dependable TKL wireless option — 1000 Hz wired polling, foam-damped acoustics, 80% layout, ~$124. Owner reports show real Bluetooth quirks on macOS and an awkward side-mounted USB-C port. Coverage is genuinely thin compared to the Q-series, so this review reflects that.

Keychron Q1 Max Review — The Q1 Pro With 2.4 GHz Wireless and a Knob, At a $20 Premium That Mostly Sticks
The Q1 Max is the Q1 Pro's natural successor: same gasket-mount aluminum 75% chassis, same QMK/VIA, plus 2.4 GHz wireless (the Pro's Bluetooth-only weak point) and a programmable knob. XDA gave it 8/10. Tom's Guide called it 'a luxury keyboard … supremely satisfying.' But Reddit's r/Keychron has a small-but-loud counter-argument: the V1 Max at $74 shares 7 of 9 core features. Both are right. The Q1 Max wins on build quality, the V1 wins on value.

Keychron Q1 Pro Review — A Bouncy, Heavy Aluminum 75% That Reviewers Keep Calling 'Comfortable'
Reviewers across YouTube, Reddit, and tech media converge on the same picture: the Q1 Pro is a heavy, well-built, comfortably-bouncy 75% with stable Bluetooth and QMK/VIA — but stock acoustics are uneven (notably the space bar), the KSA keycaps are unusually tall, and Keychron's RMA process is a known pain point. It's the keyboard most reviewers say is worth $200 if you type a lot, and not if you don't.

Keychron Q2 Review — Tom's Hardware Editor's Choice With Genuinely Terrible Stock Keycaps
Tom's Hardware named the Keychron Q2 an Editor's Choice for its gasket-mount build, screw-in stabilizers, rotary knob, and QMK/VIA support — then spent a paragraph trashing the OEM keycaps. Reddit echoes both halves: 'the board to end my keyboard addiction' (and 261 upvotes calling that prediction wrong), with the universal owner mod being a tape mod and stab tuning. Wired-only, $179, and the gateway drug to the custom keyboard hobby.

Keychron V1 Review — The Budget 75% That Tom's Guide Couldn't Find Anything to Complain About
Tom's Guide's Cons section literally reads 'Virtually none' — only flagging that the V1 is wired-only. Nextrift recommends it as 'a fantastic starting point for only $54.' Reddit treats it as the gateway to the custom keyboard hobby. The V1 is what every r/Keychron veteran tells first-mech buyers to start with: same QMK/VIA story as the Q1, plastic case instead of aluminum, ~$100 cheaper. The catch: tray-mount is stiff, stock USB cable can be DOA.

Krytox 205g0 Review — The Default Linear Lube, Used Correctly
Krytox 205g0 is the community standard for lubing linear switches and stabilizers — Kinetic Labs calls it 'one of the most used lubricants in the world of mechanical keyboards.' It deepens linear sound to a 'thockier' profile and quiets stab rattle in 5-10 minutes per stab. The catch: it's too thick for tactile leaves and stem legs, it gunks switches when over-applied, and it costs more per gram than the actual switches you're lubing. Buy 5ml, lube ~500 switches, never use it on tactile leaves.

Lemokey L3 Review — Keychron's First 'Gaming' Keyboard Is Really Just a Q3 Pro With Macros
Tom's Hardware's verdict says it best: 'a great keyboard that works well for gaming, but it feels like a stretch to call it a gaming keyboard.' XDA scored it 7.5/10. The L3 is a wireless TKL with a Q3 Pro skeleton, four macro keys, a knob, double-gasket mount, hot-swap PCB, and QMK/VIA — i.e. a Keychron enthusiast board with a slightly different layout. It's not built for esports. It's built for people who want a Q3 Pro and don't mind the Lemokey label.

Lemokey P1 HE Review — Hall-Effect Q1 HE for $50 Less, With the Same QC Lottery
Tom's Guide: 'an absolute powerhouse… difficult to recommend a mechanical keyboard over.' XDA: 'another home run for Keychron.' RTINGS lists it among the best mechanical keyboards of 2026. The P1 HE is the cheaper sibling of the Keychron Q1 HE — same Gateron Magnetic Nebula switches, same Rapid Trigger / quad-actuation feature set, same all-aluminum build — for $169 instead of the Q1 HE's $220+. The catch: it's still a Keychron-tier QC lottery, with documented reports of TMR-chip issues and double-typing on Reddit.

Logitech G Pro X TKL Review — A Safe, Boring, Competent Wireless TKL That Esports Players Buy and Don't Talk About
The G Pro X TKL Lightspeed is what Logitech does well: a no-drama wireless TKL with hot-swap GX switches, doubleshot keycaps, three connection modes, and the kind of polish you expect from a brand selling to League of Legends teams. It's not exciting and it's not the best at anything — and that's exactly the point. The Rapid sibling (wired, magnetic) is a different keyboard with different trade-offs and a much louder review reception.

Logitech G413 SE Review — A $67 Mechanical That Tom's Hardware Says You'll Regret, Amazon BSR Says You Won't
The G413 SE is the contradiction in this category. Tom's Hardware called it 'too basic for $80' in their headline; Tom's Guide called the switches 'one of Logitech's weaker' offerings. And it sits at #7 in Amazon's mechanical keyboard BSR with 1,500+ reviews at 4.6/5. The reconciliation: enthusiasts measured against $150 enthusiast boards say no; mainstream buyers replacing a membrane keyboard with their first Logitech mech say yes. Both are right.

Logitech MX Mechanical Review — The Productivity Mech That's Worth Buying At $160 But Not At $170
The MX Mechanical is Logitech's answer to 'I want my MX Keys but mechanical.' Tom's Guide's one-line verdict: 'more expensive and less customizable than competing products … at least $20 more expensive than it ought to be.' Owner sentiment on r/MechanicalKeyboards is split: enthusiasts call it overpriced for the spec, productivity users buying their first mech (especially Logitech-loyal MX Master 3S users) overwhelmingly approve. The BSR top-25 ranking on a list dominated by membrane office boards is the unusual signal.

NuPhy Air75 V2 Review — The Low-Profile Wireless That Tom's Guide Called 'Lovable but Buggy'
Six tech-media reviews — Tom's Hardware, Tom's Guide, How-To Geek, MakeUseOf, AppleInsider, SemiPro Tech+Gear — converge on the same picture: the Air75 V2 has the best battery, lightest weight, and most travel-friendly form factor in the low-profile wireless category, with real macOS Bluetooth bugs and a vendor whose customer support reputation is deteriorating. Better than the V1 in every meaningful way except long-term reliability.

NuPhy Halo75 Review — A $130 Enthusiast Board With Six Layers of Sound Dampening and a Real Support Problem
Tom's Hardware: 'sublime' typing. Tom's Guide: 'gorgeous to look at, listen to and type on.' XDA: 'a good mechanical keyboard with plenty of RGB' but with wireless reliability issues. The Halo75 V2 is the consensus mid-range full-height 75% — gasket-mount, six layers of sound dampening, mSA keycaps, QMK/VIA — and it's good enough that the bigger r/NuPhy thread isn't about typing experience but about NuPhy's customer support, which has a 41-upvote 'Not buying NuPhy again' thread to its name.

Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro Review — Macro Keys Are Back, ABS Keycaps and Synapse Are Still There
Tom's Hardware's headline says it best — 'Bringing Macro Back.' The BlackWidow V4 Pro is the streaming-and-gaming flagship Razer fans wanted: dedicated macro column, command dial, USB pass-through, underglow, brushed top case. Every reviewer also flags the same caveats — ABS keycaps, Synapse-dependent features, and a $229 price that puts it in spitting distance of enthusiast custom boards. The 75% wireless variant fixes the build, doubles the price, and shipped with the same Synapse 4 problems that plague the rest of the Razer line in 2026.

Razer BlackWidow V4 X Review — The $90 Razer the Funnel Actually Goes Through
The V4 X is the budget Razer most buyers actually purchase — 4.4/5 across 389+ Amazon reviews, BSR rank #20 in mechanical-keyboard search popularity, and a confirmed Razer Yellow / Green platform with 6 macro keys, Snap Tap firmware, and a roller bar. The reviews are mixed: people who got a good unit love it; people who hit the documented Razer QC streak (intermittent key registration, double-press) bounce off it within a year. The budget pitch is real; the reliability lottery is real too.

Razer Huntsman V3 Pro Review — Optical-Analog Done Right, Synapse 4 Done Catastrophically Wrong
Tom's Hardware called it 'an excellent alternative to the venerable (and perpetually backordered) Wooting 60HE.' Reviewers agree the Gen-2 analog optical switches and Rapid Trigger are real. The 257-upvote r/razer thread titled 'Synapse 4 is still unusable garbage' is the dominant owner story of 2026 — Razer killed Synapse 3, and the Huntsman V3 Pro's premium features now require software that often doesn't load.

Redragon K556 RGB Review — The $50 Hot-Swap Full-Size That Has Been A First Mech For 8,000 People
Eight years of being the default sub-$60 mechanical recommendation has earned the K556 8K Amazon reviews and a stable place in the 'first mech' funnel. Aluminum top plate, Outemu hot-swap sockets, real RGB. Trade-offs are real: socket pin tolerances are tight (Gateron switches barely fit per owner reports), software is bare, and a meaningful slice of owners report key dropouts in the 1–2 year window. As a $46 entry into the hobby it still pencils.

MageGee MK-Box Review — The $27 First Mech That 10,000 People Bought And Most Don't Regret
10.8K Amazon reviews and a sub-$30 price means the MK-Box is at the very bottom of the 'is this even a real mechanical' question — and yes, it is. 65% layout (68 keys, has arrows), blue Outemu-clone switches, soldered (not hot-swap), one switch type only. Owners are mostly happy but flag stabilizer rattle, mushy spacebar, and a 1–2 year horizon before the first key starts double-tapping. As 'first mech' or 'work spare' it pencils. As anything you want to mod, look elsewhere.

Royal Kludge RK84 Review — A $70 Hot-Swap Wireless That Is The Hobby's Most Common First Board
Tom's Hardware called the RK84 'Lots of Features, One Serious Flaw' (the 2.4 GHz wireless). MakeUseOf and Gadget Explained both name it an 'excellent entry-level' first mech. Reddit treats it as the gateway: every other r/MechanicalKeyboards thread that mentions it is someone modding it, swapping switches, or moving on from it to their next board. The $70 hot-swap wireless that does almost everything okay and one or two things genuinely badly.

SteelSeries Apex Pro TKL Gen 3 Review — OmniPoint 3.0 Is the Real Wooting Competitor, GG Is the Real Catch
RTINGS, PC Gamer, and Laptop Mag converge: the OmniPoint 3.0 HyperMagnetic switches are excellent, the OLED is genuinely useful, and the Apex Pro Gen 3 finally has the hardware to challenge Wooting on per-key actuation and Rapid Trigger. The catches are SteelSeries GG software (described as 'bloated' on Reddit), no per-key actuation in the OLED menu, and the Wooting community's near-religious preference for Wootility. At $159–$222, it's the third-leg of the gaming-keyboard mainstream — and the only one in standard TKL form factor with Hall-effect switches.

Wobkey Rainy 75 Pro Review — The 'Raindrop' Sound Profile Lives Up to the Hype, the VIA Setup Doesn't
Tom's Guide rated it 4.5/5: 'one of the best-sounding keyboards out there.' Tom's Hardware: 'a great-sounding keyboard that won't break the bank.' Tom's Guide listed the Rainy 75 Pro as their favorite 75% pick of 2025 ('If sound matters (and it should), you'll want the Rainy 75 Pro'). The catches are real — TechRadar flagged 'better value alternatives in this already saturated marketplace,' the VIA web app requires JSON file downloads, and the keyboard weighs 'about as much as a tank.' But on the audiophile-keyboard pitch, the Rainy 75 Pro genuinely delivers.

Wooting 60HE Review — The Hall-Effect Board Pros Actually Use, and Why
Three years of reviews and Reddit threads tell the same story: the Wooting 60HE is the keyboard competitive FPS players keep coming back to, because per-key actuation and Rapid Trigger are real advantages — not marketing. The case is plastic, there are no adjustable feet, and you have to plug it in. None of that has slowed it down.

Wooting 80HE Review — The 60HE Grown Up, With an 80% Layout Nobody Else Uses
Reviewers landed on the same answer: the 80HE is the best Wooting yet — Lekker V2 switches, 8 kHz polling, gasket mount — and the most polarizing layout in the gaming-keyboard space right now. The plastic chassis flexes, the zinc-cased editions have coating issues, and the 80% PCB doesn't fit any standard third-party case. None of that is stopping it.