Some companies make good products. Wooting made a movement. When the Dutch startup shipped the first Wooting 60HE with hall effect switches and full Rapid Trigger support, they didn't just release a keyboard — they handed the competitive gaming community proof that the fixed actuation point was an arbitrary limitation, and that the entire industry had been building keyboards wrong for decades.
The ripple effect has been total. SteelSeries retooled their flagship Apex Pro around hall effect. Razer shipped analog optical switches claiming the same benefits. Corsair entered with the K70 MAX. DrunkDeer built a cottage industry around budget hall effect boards. Every one of these products exists because Wooting forced the question: if your keyboard could register a keypress at 0.1mm and reset the instant you start lifting your finger, why would you ever accept anything less?
In 2026, Wooting's lineup spans five products across 60%, 75%, and full-size layouts — including the freshly launched 60HE v2 with true 8 kHz polling and an aluminum case that finally answers the long-standing build quality critique. This guide breaks down every model in detail, explains the Lekker switch family, walks through Wootility's most important features, and tells you exactly which Wooting keyboard — if any — is right for you.
What Makes Wooting Different From Every Other Keyboard
Before diving into the models, you need to understand why Wooting keyboards perform the way they do. The advantages aren't marketing language — they're physics.
Hall Effect Magnetic Switches: No Contact, No Wear
Every keyboard switch you've used before this one works through physical contact. Two metal contacts touch when you press a key, completing a circuit. This means there's a fixed point where the keypress registers, a fixed reset point slightly above it (the hysteresis gap), and eventual wear as metal contacts degrade over millions of keystrokes.
Hall effect switches eliminate all of this. Instead of metal contacts, Lekker switches contain a magnet embedded in the stem and a Hall effect sensor on the PCB. The sensor detects changes in magnetic field strength as the magnet moves, reading precise stem position — down to 0.1mm — without any physical contact occurring. The result: theoretically unlimited lifespan (Wooting rates Lekker switches at 100 million keypresses), zero contact degradation, and — crucially — the ability to register keypresses at any point in the travel rather than a fixed mechanical threshold.
For a deeper breakdown of how the technology works, read our hall effect keyboard guide. And if you're wondering how this compares to the switches in your current keyboard, hall effect vs mechanical switches covers the performance implications side by side.
Rapid Trigger: The Feature That Changed Competitive Gaming
This is the one. Rapid Trigger is why professional players use Wooting keyboards, why CS2 pros obsess over ADAD speeds, and why every competitor now ships some version of it.
Traditional keyboards have two hard-coded points: the actuation point (where the keypress registers going down) and the reset point (where it deregisters going up). Even if you set actuation to 0.5mm, your keyboard won't reset until you've lifted the key back past a fixed threshold — typically 1.5–2mm above actuation. This means fast strafe inputs have a built-in dead zone that cannot be optimized away.
Rapid Trigger eliminates the fixed reset point entirely. Instead, the keyboard registers a press the instant the key moves downward past the actuation depth and registers a release the instant the key moves upward by any measurable amount (minimum 0.1mm). Every key behaves like a hair trigger in both directions. In CS2, this translates directly to faster counter-strafing: your movement key releases the frame you start lifting, not a millimeter or two later.
This is not a gimmick. Pro players notice the difference, adopt it, and don't go back. Our Rapid Trigger keyboard guide covers the setup recommendations in detail.
Wootility: Likely the Best Keyboard Software on the Market
Wootility is available as both a desktop app (Windows, macOS, Linux) and a browser-based web app at app.wooting.io — no installation required. All settings are stored in the keyboard's 8 MB onboard memory, which means your configuration travels with the board. Plug it into any computer and every setting works without installing anything.
This stands in contrast to standard custom keyboard firmware like QMK/VIA — more powerful in some respects, but significantly more technical and not designed with competitive gaming features in mind. For a comparison of software-based versus firmware-based keyboard customization, see our keyboard firmware guide.
Key Wootility features include: Rapid Trigger (per-key, 0.1mm sensitivity), Dynamic Keystroke (DKS), Tachyon Mode (8 kHz polling), Rappy Snappy / Snappy Tappy (SOCD modes), Mod Tap, analog gamepad emulation, per-key remapping, 4 profiles × 3 layers, and open-source SDKs for third-party integrations.
Lekker Switches: Four Variants, One Family
Wooting's Lekker switches are manufactured by Gateron and designed specifically for hall effect PCBs — they are not compatible with standard MX sockets. The current family includes four main variants:
Lekker L60 V1 — 40 cN start force, 60 cN bottom-out, 4.0mm total travel. Ships with the 60HE+ and Two HE.
Lekker L45 V1 — 30 cN start, 45 cN bottom-out, 4.0mm travel. The lighter option for those preferring minimal actuation force.
Lekker L60 V2 and L45 V2 — Redesigned housings with tighter tolerances, reduced stem wobble, improved factory lubrication, and better acoustics. The L60 V2 ships standard in the 80HE.
Lekker Tikken — The newest switch, released November 2025. Closed-bottom housing (Wooting calls it the first closed-bottom Hall Effect switch with full 4mm travel), 42 cN start / 54 cN bottom-out, POM stem, nylon bottom housing, polycarbonate top. Produces a distinctly deeper, more muted sound profile compared to the open-bottom L60 variants. Ships in the 60HE v2; available separately.
All Lekker switches are hot-swappable across Wooting boards. If you want to compare how Lekker linears feel against traditional mechanical options, our best linear switches guide includes context on switch feel and actuation profiles. For a foundational explanation of switch types, keyboard switches explained is the starting point.
Community and Transparency
Wooting's Discord is active and regularly moderated by the team — firmware updates are discussed openly before release, issues are acknowledged publicly, and feature requests have a documented pipeline. This transparency is rarer than it should be in the peripheral industry and is part of why the Wooting community is unusually loyal.
Wooting 60HE+: The Keyboard That Changed Competitive Gaming
The Wooting 60HE+ is the direct descendant of the original keyboard that put Wooting on the map. It remains one of the best arguments for why a competitive FPS player doesn't need anything more than a 60% board — when the software and switch technology are this good, layout becomes a matter of personal preference, not performance.
Layout: 60%, 61 keys, ANSI (ISO also available). Standard GH60-compatible tray mount, meaning it drops into most aftermarket 60% cases without modification. For players unfamiliar with 60% keyboards, our 60% keyboard layout guide covers the workflow adjustments involved.
Switches: Lekker L60 V1 (40–60 cN, 4.0mm travel), hot-swappable to any Lekker variant.
Polling rate: 1,000 Hz standard; Tachyon Mode prioritizes scan rate to achieve sub-1ms latency. Note that unlike the newer 80HE and 60HE v2, this model does not support true 8 kHz USB polling — though in practical competitive play, sub-1ms at 1,000 Hz is functionally imperceptible for the vast majority of players. For context on what polling rate actually affects in-game, see keyboard polling rate explained.
Connectivity: Wired USB-C, 2m braided cable included (USB-C to USB-A). No wireless option.
Case / Build: ABS plastic, steel switch plate, tray mount. At 605g (1.33 lbs), it's light. The build quality has historically been the most-cited criticism — the plastic case produces more flex than metal alternatives, and at $175, some reviewers have found the feel underwhelming against the price. A module-only version at $119.99 is available for buyers who already own a GH60-compatible case.
Features: Per-key RGB, PBT keycaps, 4 profiles × 3 layers, 8MB onboard memory, N-key rollover (read more about N-key rollover and anti-ghosting), full Wootility feature set including Rapid Trigger, DKS, Mod Tap, and Rappy Snappy. No hot-swap with standard MX switches — Lekker-only.
Price: ~$174.99 pre-built | ~$119.99 module | Check price on Amazon | Buy direct from Wooting
Who it's for: Competitive FPS players who want the original Wooting experience at the lowest entry price. Players who already own a GH60 case and want the module only. Anyone who wants Rapid Trigger + DKS in the most portable form factor possible.
Who should pass: Players who game and work from the same board (missing F-keys and arrow keys require layer-switching habituation). Anyone who needs wireless. Players who care deeply about typing acoustics — the steel plate and tray mount are utilitarian, not premium.
Wooting 60HE v2: A Classic, Reinvented
The 60HE v2 launched via a Founders' Campaign in November 2025, raising over €7.4 million from 23,355 backers. Aluminum units shipped in December 2025 (batch 1) and February 2026 (batch 2); the plastic variant began shipping in April 2026. This is the keyboard Wooting has been building toward since the original 60HE — and it answers nearly every recurring criticism.
The most significant upgrade is the case. The v2 offers both a premium aluminum option (Just Black or Bright Silver anodized) and a budget ABS plastic version. The aluminum case transforms the tactile experience entirely — gone is the flex that reviewers associated with the original at $175, replaced by a rigid, dampened housing with an FR4 plate, HD Poron sandwich dampening, PET film layer, and interchangeable bottom pads (silicone, EPDM, or open). The friction-fit modular design allows tool-less disassembly.
The second major upgrade is polling rate. The 60HE v2 introduces true 8 kHz USB polling via Tachyon Mode, bringing the 60% form factor to parity with the 80HE and achieving a measured input latency of ~0.125ms. This is synchronized scan-and-poll at 8,000 Hz — not just a faster USB poll riding on a slower scan rate, as some competitors implement it.
The third upgrade is the Lekker Tikken switch shipping as default. The closed-bottom design produces a noticeably deeper, more muted sound profile that reviewers have described as "premium" — closer to the thock of a lubed linear mechanical switch than the sharper crack of the L60 V1. PC Gamer called the v2 the "best Wooting keyboard ever made" specifically on the strength of its new acoustic profile.
Additional v2 improvements: optional split-spacebar layout support, improved shine-through PBT keycaps, and a 4-year warranty (versus the Two HE's 2 years, and a significant advantage over most competitors' 1-year coverage).
Price: $239.99 (aluminum) | $179.99 (plastic) | $139.99 (module only) | Buy direct from Wooting
Who it's for: Anyone who wanted the original 60HE but couldn't justify the build quality at the price. Players who need the absolute minimum input latency in the 60% form factor. The aluminum version competes directly with custom keyboard builds at similar price points while delivering competitive features no custom board offers natively.
Wooting 80HE: Hall Effect Meets the 75% Layout
If the 60HE is Wooting's competitive purist board, the 80HE is their most broadly useful keyboard — and the one that most pros actually use. At launch, the Founders' Campaign raised over €7.4 million from the same community that made the 60HE famous. By early 2026, ProSettings.net tracked 306 professional players using the 80HE as their primary board across CS2, Valorant, Fortnite, Rainbow Six Siege, and Apex Legends.
The 80HE's value proposition is simple: everything that makes the 60HE exceptional, plus F-keys, arrow keys, and a dedicated navigation cluster — without the size compromise of a full TKL. Classified as 75% or compact TKL, the 84-key ANSI layout retains the keys that matter most for productivity without expanding to a full 100% footprint. If you want context on how this sits in the keyboard size spectrum, our TKL keyboard guide and keyboard size guide are worth reading before deciding.
Switches: Lekker L60 V2 (40–60 cN, 4.0mm travel), hot-swappable. The V2 housing improvements over the original L60 are tangible — reduced stem wobble, slightly improved acoustic profile, and better out-of-box lubrication. The TenZ Takeover limited edition ships with Lekker Tikken TenZ Edition switches: same architecture, lighter spring, co-designed by TenZ for his preferred actuation feel.
Polling rate: True 8,000 Hz via Tachyon Mode (synchronized scan + poll), achieving ~0.125ms input latency. This is Wooting's published spec and has been independently measured by reviewers including ProSettings.net and NotebookCheck. At standard mode, the 80HE operates at 1,600 Hz. For those wondering whether these latency differences matter in practice, our keyboard latency explained guide gives context.
Build: Available in two configurations — PCR ABS plastic ($202–209) and zinc alloy ($294–299, includes a carrying case). The zinc alloy version at nearly 2.2kg is not for portability; it's for players who want absolute rigidity and the premium desk feel of a heavy metal chassis. The ABS version has drawn persistent criticism for flex and a somewhat hollow sound, a trade-off Wooting made explicitly to keep the base price accessible.
The mount is a silicone gasket system that provides meaningful isolation between the PCB/plate assembly and the outer case, reducing typing vibration and improving acoustics versus the 60HE+'s tray mount. The polycarbonate plate flexes slightly on keypress, contributing to a softer, less jarring bottom-out feel.
A 10-segment LED indicator bar on the rear edge of the board displays layer, profile, and Tachyon mode status — a small but genuinely useful addition that the 60% boards lack. Three interchangeable feet allow angle adjustment at 2.8°, 6°, and 10°.
The 80HE ships with a braided USB-C cable (C-to-C plus a C-to-A adapter), and features N-key rollover, per-key RGB, and the full Wootility feature set. The module-only version at ~$164–170 fits the KBDfans GT-80 and bone80 cases — two of very few aftermarket options that accommodate Wooting's non-standard PCB layout.
Price: ~$202–209 (ABS pre-built) | ~$294–299 (zinc alloy) | ~$164–170 (module) | $229 (TenZ Takeover, often OOS) | Check on Amazon | Buy direct from Wooting
Who it's for: Competitive gamers who want F-keys and arrow keys without going full TKL. The default choice for anyone entering the Wooting ecosystem in 2026 — it represents the best combination of layout flexibility and competitive performance in the lineup. Players who benefit from macro or hotkey setups will find the 80HE dramatically more ergonomic than the 60%.
Who should pass: Players with strict weight/portability requirements (the plastic version is manageable at 790g; the zinc is not). Anyone who needs wireless. Players who want a premium build quality at the $200 price point should either wait for the right sale on the zinc version or look at aluminum competitors like the SteelSeries Apex Pro TKL Gen 3.
Wooting Two HE: The Full-Size Option
The Two HE is Wooting's full-size (100%) keyboard and the oldest active product in the lineup. It's still sold and still runs the full Wootility feature set, but it's clearly the previous generation. Maximum polling is 1,000 Hz (Tachyon Mode achieves ~1ms latency, not the 0.125ms of the newer boards), the case is ABS with an aluminum switch plate and standard mount — no gasket isolation — and the warranty is 2 years rather than the 4 years on newer models.
At ~$195–204, it's priced nearly identically to the 80HE ABS, which makes the value proposition genuinely difficult to justify. The Two HE's only advantage over the 80HE is the numpad — if your workflow requires a numpad (financial modeling, data entry, 3D software hotkeys), the Two HE is Wooting's sole option. If you don't need the numpad, the 80HE is strictly the better purchase at a similar price.
Wooting 60HE+ vs 80HE: Which One Should You Buy?
This is the question most people actually need answered, so here's the direct comparison — no hedging.
| Spec | Wooting 60HE+ | Wooting 80HE |
|---|---|---|
| Layout | 60% (61 keys) | 75% / compact TKL (84 keys) |
| F-row | No (layer access) | Yes |
| Arrow keys | No (layer access) | Yes, dedicated |
| Default switch | Lekker L60 V1 | Lekker L60 V2 |
| Polling rate | 1,000 Hz (Tachyon: <1ms) | 8,000 Hz (Tachyon: ~0.125ms) |
| Mount | Tray (GH60 compatible) | Silicone gasket |
| Case material | ABS plastic | ABS or zinc alloy |
| Plate | Steel | Polycarbonate |
| Aftermarket case | Very wide (GH60) | Very limited (2 options) |
| Weight | 605g | 790g (ABS) / 2,160g (zinc) |
| Connectivity | Wired USB-C | Wired USB-C |
| Warranty | 4 years | 4 years |
| Price | ~$174.99 | ~$202–209 (ABS) |
Pick the 60HE+ if: You exclusively use your keyboard for gaming and don't need F-keys or arrow keys at all — not even briefly for productivity, media control, or navigation. You already have a GH60-compatible case and want the module only. Budget matters more than absolute performance — the $30 difference is real money, and the latency gap between <1ms and 0.125ms is not perceptible in gameplay for 99% of players.
Pick the 80HE if: You use your keyboard for anything beyond pure gaming. You work from the same machine. You play games that use F-keys (open-world games, strategy titles, most MOBAs, any game with in-game menus). You want the gasket mount's improved typing feel and acoustic profile. You want the latest Lekker L60 V2 switches. You want true 8 kHz polling for the lowest possible latency.
The honest verdict: For most people, the 80HE is the right choice. The $30 premium over the 60HE+ buys a more usable layout, a better mount, better switches, and a significantly higher polling rate. The 60HE+ makes sense in a narrow use case — dedicated tournament board, case build project, or strict budget constraint. If you're choosing between the 60HE v2 aluminum and the 80HE, they're genuinely comparable in quality and the decision comes down entirely to layout preference.
Wooting vs the Competition
The hall effect keyboard market Wooting pioneered now has over 60 tested models across all price points. Here's how the main alternatives actually compare.
Wooting vs DrunkDeer A75 (~$104–130)
DrunkDeer's A75 is the most common recommendation for players who want hall effect on a budget. At roughly 60–65% of Wooting's price, it delivers functional Rapid Trigger, adjustable actuation, and 1,000 Hz polling. The newer DrunkDeer A75 Ultra HE (~$150–219) raises the stakes considerably: 8,000 Hz polling and Rapid Trigger sensitivity down to 0.01mm — ten times more precise than Wooting's 0.1mm minimum.
Where DrunkDeer loses is software. The companion app is competent but nowhere near Wootility's depth — no DKS, no analog gamepad mode, no Mod Tap, no open-source SDK. Build quality on the A75 is also notably better than Wooting's ABS options at comparable prices. If you want Wootility features, buy Wooting. If you want a capable rapid trigger board at minimum cost, DrunkDeer deserves serious consideration.
Wooting vs SteelSeries Apex Pro TKL Gen 3 (~$190–270)
The Apex Pro Gen 3 uses OmniPoint 3.0 HyperMagnetic switches — Gateron-manufactured hall effect, matching Wooting's 0.1–4.0mm actuation range. Its "Protection Mode" reduces adjacent key interference during fast inputs, a feature Wooting doesn't offer. The OLED display provides on-board profile switching without software. Build quality (Series 5000 aluminum) is definitively better than Wooting's ABS at comparable prices.
The Apex Pro is capped at 1,000 Hz polling and lacks DKS, analog gamepad emulation, and the depth of Wootility's customization. The wireless variant adds Bluetooth and 2.4 GHz connectivity — something Wooting has yet to offer in any product. If wireless or premium build quality are priorities, the Apex Pro is a legitimate alternative. If competitive feature depth and polling rate matter more, Wooting wins.
Wooting vs Razer Huntsman V3 Pro (~$180–270)
A critical clarification: the Huntsman V3 Pro is not a hall effect keyboard. Razer uses analog optical switches — position sensing via infrared light rather than magnetic field detection. The functional behavior (adjustable actuation, Rapid Trigger, analog mode) is similar, and the 8 kHz variants match Wooting's polling rate. Razer claims optical sensing eliminates magnetic interference concerns.
In practice, the Huntsman V3 Pro and Wooting 80HE operate similarly in competitive settings. Razer's premium is an aircraft-grade aluminum body and a broader product ecosystem. Wooting's advantage is Wootility's depth, DKS, and the community-driven development that has consistently shipped meaningful features faster than Razer's firmware team.
| Wooting 80HE | DrunkDeer A75 Ultra | Apex Pro TKL Gen 3 | Huntsman V3 Pro | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Switch tech | Hall effect | Hall effect | Hall effect | Analog optical |
| Min. actuation | 0.1 mm | 0.01 mm | 0.1 mm | 0.1 mm |
| Polling rate | 8,000 Hz | 8,000 Hz | 1,000 Hz | 4,000–8,000 Hz |
| Wireless | No | No | Optional | No |
| DKS / Analog mode | Yes / Yes | No / No | No / Yes | No / Yes |
| Price | $202–209 | ~$150–219 | $190–270 | $180–270 |
Wootility: Quick-Start Guide to the Most Important Features
You don't need to spend hours in Wootility to get competitive value out of a Wooting keyboard. These are the four settings that matter most.
Setting Up Rapid Trigger
Open Wootility, select your profile, click any key, and toggle Rapid Trigger on. The two values to configure are actuation point (how far you press before the keypress registers) and rapid trigger sensitivity (minimum movement in either direction that constitutes a press or release).
For competitive FPS: set actuation point to 1.5–2.0mm and Rapid Trigger sensitivity to 0.2–0.4mm. This prevents false triggers from incidental finger movement while still enabling faster-than-mechanical strafe resets. Some pros drop sensitivity to 0.1mm — the minimum — but this requires clean, deliberate key technique to avoid unintended inputs. Start at 0.3mm and adjust from there.
Dynamic Keystroke (DKS)
DKS assigns up to four separate actions to a single key based on press depth: half-press down, full-press down, half-release, full-release. In a game with a walk/sprint toggle, you'd bind walk to half-press and sprint to full-press. In CS2, some players bind primary fire to a shallow actuation and secondary fire or scope to full travel on the same key.
Enable DKS in Wootility by clicking any key and selecting the DKS tab. Each depth threshold is independently configurable.
Tachyon Mode
Tachyon Mode enables true 8 kHz polling on the 80HE and 60HE v2. The trade-off: RGB lighting is disabled while Tachyon is active (the USB bus can't reliably handle both at 8 kHz). The practical approach: create a dedicated gaming profile with Tachyon on and RGB off, and a separate productivity profile with Tachyon off and RGB enabled.
For the 60HE+ and Two HE, Tachyon Mode still improves latency by prioritizing the keyboard scan over RGB processing, achieving sub-1ms response even at 1,000 Hz USB polling.
Profiles and Layers
Wootility supports 4 profiles, each with 3 remappable layers. Profiles are switched via dedicated shortcuts or Wootility — use them for different games or applications. Layers within a profile are toggled by hold keys (similar to a function key), allowing one board to serve multiple layout configurations without changing profiles. This is where the 60HE+'s missing F-keys live: on a layer activated by holding a modifier key, configurable per-profile.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Wooting 60HE worth the price in 2026?
Yes — with a caveat. The 60HE+ at $175 delivers genuine competitive advantages that no non-hall-effect keyboard can match. The Rapid Trigger implementation and Wootility software are still best-in-class. The caveat is that the plastic build quality is not impressive at this price point. If budget is tight, the 60HE+ is worth it. If you can stretch to the 60HE v2 plastic ($179.99) or the 80HE ($202), those are meaningfully better products.
Wooting 60HE vs 80HE: which should I buy?
The 80HE for almost everyone. The $30 difference gets you dedicated F-keys, arrow keys, a gasket mount, better switches (L60 V2), and true 8 kHz polling. The 60HE+ makes sense only if you're a dedicated competitive player who never needs function keys or is specifically building a custom 60% case around the Wooting module.
Can you use a Wooting keyboard for typing and work?
Yes, with one asterisk. The Lekker switches are smooth linears — they type well, and the feel is not dissimilar to a well-lubed Gateron Yellow. The 80HE is comfortable for long typing sessions. The 60% models require adapting to function key layers, which takes time but most users manage within a week. One legitimate limitation: the typing sound profile on the 60HE+ with its steel plate and tray mount is sharper and less refined than premium typing boards. The 60HE v2 (aluminum, Tikken switches) and the zinc 80HE are significantly more pleasant for all-day use.
Is Wooting better than the SteelSeries Apex Pro?
Depends on what you optimize for. Wooting wins on polling rate (8 kHz vs 1 kHz), software depth (DKS, analog mode, Wootility), and price-to-feature ratio. SteelSeries wins on build quality (aluminum vs. ABS at comparable prices) and wireless availability. Both keyboards deliver class-leading competitive performance. Neither is wrong.
Do Wooting keyboards work on console?
Partially. Wooting keyboards work on PS4/PS5 and Xbox via USB — the console recognizes them as standard HID keyboards. However, Rapid Trigger and most Wootility features are processed at the firmware level and function normally regardless of what device the keyboard is connected to. The analog gamepad emulation mode works on consoles that support XInput or DirectInput controllers over USB.
How long do Lekker switches last?
Wooting rates every Lekker switch at 100 million keypresses. Because there are no physical contacts to wear, the primary failure mode is the physical spring — not electrical degradation. Wooting sells spring replacement packs separately, and switch replacement is straightforward given the hot-swap sockets. In practical terms, no Wooting keyboard is known to have failed from switch wear to date.
Conclusion
Wooting didn't invent hall effect keyboard switches. They made them matter. The combination of Rapid Trigger, Dynamic Keystroke, true 8 kHz polling, and Wootility's continuous free software updates represents a feature package no competitor has fully replicated — even as the market has exploded with alternatives at every price point.
In 2026, the Wooting 80HE is the default recommendation for competitive gamers who want the proven standard. The Wooting 60HE v2 is the right call if portability and form factor matter most, especially in the aluminum version that finally gives the 60% lineup a build quality worthy of its price. The original 60HE+ remains a competent entry point for budget-conscious buyers who still want the full Wootility experience.
At this price point, you're paying a premium for the best Rapid Trigger implementation on the market and software that the community has relied on through five major version updates. That premium is justified for competitive players. For casual gaming or hybrid gaming/productivity setups, evaluate whether the alternatives at $100–150 might serve just as well.
Ready to configure your perfect setup? The mkbguide.com keyboard builder lets you find the right combination of keyboard, switches, and accessories for your playstyle and budget.



