Look at this keyboard – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Photo composite of someone pressing the “Wow” button on their keyboard.
Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

Hey, real quick: look at this keyboard. There’s something cool about it.

It’s a mechanical keyboard. It’s a laser keyboard. It’s a magnetic induction keyboard.

It has the new switches. It has the old switches. It’s very thin. It’s got a weird layout. It has a trackpoint. Or a screen. It has cool keycaps. It has cool screens on its keycaps. It’s...furry? It folds in half. It’s retractable.

Maybe it’s not a keyboard at all, except spiritually. Sometimes it’s a mouse, or a trackpad, or a trackball.

Sometimes The Verge reviews keyboards. Other times, we just want to show them to you.

Look at this keyboard.

  • Marathon battery life makes Keychron’s Ultra 8K keyboards its best yet

    268472_Keychron_V5_Q1_Ultra_8K_keyboards_ADiBenedetto_0001
    268472_Keychron_V5_Q1_Ultra_8K_keyboards_ADiBenedetto_0001
    Photo: Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

    Keychron’s expansive keyboard catalog covers everything from basic full-size mechanical boards to niche layouts like southpaw Alice or a one-handed half-keyboard for gaming. Its Q and V series are among our go-to recommendations for off-the-shelf keyboards, and the latest iterations — the Q and V Ultra models — are a straightforward upgrade to the lineup, with benefits for regular users and deep-in-the-weeds keyboard nerds alike.

    I’ve been testing two Ultra keyboards: the Keychron V5 Ultra 8K and Keychron Q1 Ultra 8K. The $119.99 V5 Ultra is a near-full-size 1800-layout board with a number pad in a plastic case, while the $229.99 Q1 Ultra is a 75-percent layout (my preferred size) with a much heavier milled-aluminum chassis and much more robust build and typing feel. Aside from case material and layout, they’re very similar keyboards that are both excellent.

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  • Keychron’s new remappable keyboard folds in half.

    After announcing a compact trackball at CES 2026 called the Nape Pro, Keychron is embracing portability again with a new wireless keyboard that can fold in half. The $64.99 Keychron B11 Pro features concave ABS keycaps with a low-profile scissor mechanism, a 250mAh battery, an ergonomic split Alice layout, and Bluetooth, USB-C, or 2.4GHz wireless connectivity.

    <em>The B11 Pro uses a split ergonomic Alice layout that can be remapped and customized using the Keychron Launcher web app.</em>
    <em>A Hall effect sensor powers down the keyboard when it’s folded in half.</em>
    <em>The B11 Pro can connect to Mac, Windows, or Linux PCs over Bluetooth, a USB-C cable, or an included 2.4GHz dongle.</em>
    1/3
    The B11 Pro uses a split ergonomic Alice layout that can be remapped and customized using the Keychron Launcher web app.
    Image: Keychron
  • This DIY kit turned my favorite mechanical keyboard into my favorite electrocapacitive keyboard

    268259_Dynacap_keyboard_conversion_NEdwards_0116
    268259_Dynacap_keyboard_conversion_NEdwards_0116
    Photo by Nathan Edwards / The Verge

    For my money, you simply cannot get a better electrocapacitive keyboard than the Bauer Lite with a DynaCap kit.

    [Editor’s note: Huh?]

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  • Naya Connect is a modular mechanical keyboard system for the indecisive

    Naya Connect modular Keyboard
    Naya Connect modular Keyboard
    Image: Naya

    Naya has already shipped one successful Kickstarter for a weird keyboard. The Naya Create was an ergonomic split deck with four swappable controller add-ons: a touchpad, a trackball, a rotary encoder, or a 6DoF spatial mouse. The Connect takes that modular concept, applies it to a more traditional flat keyboard form factor, and expands the ecosystem to be even more flexible. And clearly, people are into the idea, because it hit its minuscule funding goal in just six minutes.

    The Naya Connect has four main components: a low-profile 75% mechanical keyboard called the Naya Type, a 24-key multipad, a six-key programmable strip, and a dock. The dock has four keys and a slot for one of the same four swappable controllers as the Create. If you can’t decide between a full-size keyboard or a compact one, a trackball or a mouse, this could solve your indecision.

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  • Cameron Faulkner

    Cameron Faulkner

    The Asus Falcata is a Hall effect split ergo gaming keyboard that falls short

    Asus Falcata
    Asus Falcata
    Each half is compact, and they fit together for easy travel.
    Photo by Cameron Faulkner / The Verge

    Hall effect gaming keyboards aren’t uncommon. But Asus’ ROG Falcata is the only one that’s also a split ergonomic keyboard, aimed at alleviating wrist, hand, or arm pain. For the luxury of having it all, you’ll pay $419.99, enough to buy a nice Hall effect keyboard and a split ergonomic one.

    It’d be worth it if the Falcata truly represented the best of both worlds, but I’m split. As a Hall effect board, it succeeds, offering a wealth of customization options, including the ability to let you adjust each key’s actuation point by as little as a hundredth of a millimeter at a time. But if you’re buying it for ergonomics, like me, then maybe not. My biggest concern during testing was its limited tenting angles. $420 seems very steep for a keyboard that doesn’t... get very steep.

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  • Logitech’s latest keyboard dabbles in enthusiast features

    258042_Logitech_Alto_Keys_K98M_keyboard_ADiBenedetto_0001
    258042_Logitech_Alto_Keys_K98M_keyboard_ADiBenedetto_0001
    Love me some lavender.
    Photo: Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

    Logitech’s Alto Keys K98M mechanical keyboard is now available in North America after its initial launch in China and other select markets. The $119.99 Alto Keys K98M is an almost full-size 1800-layout keyboard, offering a slightly compact design that maintains a number pad. But what makes the K98M special for a mass-market Logitech board is that it’s fully hot-swappable with standard Cherry MX-compatible key switches and uses an internal gasket mount for a semi-soft typing feel. Logitech is taking some belated cues from enthusiast keyboards.

    The Alto Keys has a two-piece plastic case with a translucent top portion and opaque bottom that’s color-matched to its included keycaps. It comes in white, graphite, and lavender color combos, with white backlighting and shine-through PBT keycaps. It’s a simple and clean aesthetic designed for mass appeal. As are its specs and features, like a claimed battery life of up to 12 months (with white backlighting turned off) and Bluetooth / Logi Bolt wireless connectivity — each usable on Windows, macOS, Linux, ChromeOS, iOS / iPadOS, and Android.

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  • Nathan Edwards

    Nathan Edwards

    Hands on with Ursa, a new keycap option for Topre keyboards

    ursa_hero
    ursa_hero
    Ursa’s classic spherical profile and centered legends dress up any Topre keyboard.
    Photo by Nathan Edwards / The Verge

    Your Happy Hacking Keyboard can finally get fresh caps.

    While regular keyboards have an embarrassment of keycap options, Topre boards like the HHKB or Realforce R3 don’t. They’ve more or less been relegated to OEM-profile PBT keycaps with dye-sublimated legends, in light grey, charcoal, white, or (recently) a few more colorful options. Something as basic as black keycaps with white legends just didn’t exist for unmodified Topre boards. Until now.

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  • Andrew Liszewski

    Andrew Liszewski

    Google Japan’s concept keyboard is inspired by rotary phones

    google_keyboard1
    google_keyboard1
    Feeling overproductive at work? Google Japan’s new concept keyboard gives you a chance to slow down.
    Image: YouTube / Google Japan

    Following an April Fools’ Day prank in 2021 that had a delayed reveal as a result of the pandemic, Google Japan has been cooking up weird and wonderful keyboard concepts year after year. Its latest creation seems straight out of an alternate dimension where touch-tone technology never replaced rotary phones, and that functionality eventually found its way into other devices.

    Instead of keys, the Gboard Dial Version keyboard features various alphanumeric characters and functions laid out beneath a series of nine dials of various sizes, including one just for the return key. To type a specific character, you stick your finger in its corresponding hole and then rotate the dial until you reach its limit. When you release it, the dial rotates back.

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  • Dominic Preston

    Dominic Preston

    Refine your own macrodata for the low, low price of $899.

    That’s how much Atomic Keyboard is charging for its MDR Dasher keyboard, based on Apple TV’s Severance, though early adopters can save $300 with a $10 deposit. That gets you an aluminum keyboard with a trackball and swappable magnetic top sheet that enables three different layouts, depending on how show-accurate you feel like being.

    If it’s a little steep for you, $197 gets you Signature Plastics’ Macrodata Refinement keycap set to upgrade an existing board.

    <em>Innie matches the show’s keyboard, but lacks keys like Escape, Command, and Control.</em>
    <em>Outie is closer to a traditional 60 percent layout, with Severance flourishes like the trackball.</em>
    <em>Dasher recreates the original DG Dasher D2 the show’s board is based on.</em>
    1/4Image: Atomic Keyboard
  • Nathan Edwards

    Nathan Edwards

    Norbauer Seneca review: a $3,600 luxury keyboard for the keyboard obsessed

    Verge_Seneca-53QP
    Verge_Seneca-53QP
    The best, and most expensive, thing I’ve ever typed on.
    Photo by Nathan Edwards / The Verge

    Some people can tell great wine from okay wine. They go on wine tastings, take wine tours. They tend to spend more money on wine than most.

    I am not one of those people. I can tell wine from vinegar if you show me the bottle. I am just a little bit obsessed with keyboards, though.

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  • Andrew Liszewski

    Andrew Liszewski

    This brutalist machined aluminum keyboard is still beautiful.

    Serene Industries is following up on its massive wedge-shaped Icebreaker keyboard with a smaller, lighter alternative called the Cleaver. Available for preorder now for $850 it’s also cheaper, but by no means cheap.

    Machined from a single block of aluminum, the Cleaver features Hall effect switches and swappable aluminum keycaps perforated with holes to allow LED backlighting to shine through. It’s USB-C only, and available with Windows or Mac layouts and clear or black anodized finishes.

    <em>The Cleaver is available for preorder and will go into production a few weeks after launch.</em>
    <em>You can order the Cleaver without the matching aluminum keycaps if you want to use your own, dropping the preorder price to $650.</em>
    <em>The Cleaver offers no wireless connectivity, but the lack of an internal battery helps keep its design slim.</em>
    1/3
    The Cleaver is available for preorder and will go into production a few weeks after launch.
    Image: Serene Industries
  • Nathan Edwards

    Nathan Edwards

    “Which one’s the Any Key?”

    This would be a mildly funny April Fools’ Day gag if it were a fake product announcement. But CYL Any Keys is a real keycap set you can buy today. And it’s from GMK, so it’s a high-quality mildly funny April Fools’ Day gag, with doubleshot legends and support for mAny different keyboard layouts.

    I’m holding out for MTNU Any Keys, though.

    Photo of a blue keyboard with beige keycaps, nearly all of which say “Any Key”
    Photo: Novelkeys
  • Nathan Edwards

    Nathan Edwards

    The $3,600 keyboard that’s optimized for joy.

    I’ve spent the past week typing on an early unit of the Norbauer Seneca, a mechanical keyboard that’s entirely custom, from its Topre-like electrocapacitive switches to its astonishingly smooth stabilizers. I also spoke at length with its creator about the process of making the board and why it’s so damn expensive. Stay tuned next week, feel free to ask about it in the comments, and meanwhile: just look at this keyboard.

    A grey keyboard with dark grey modifier keys, white alphas, and pink Esc and Enter keys. It’s a thick, slab-like board that almost looks like it’s cast in cement. It has a coiled cable.
    The most expensive keyboard I’ve ever typed on, and also the best.
    Photo: Nathan Edwards / The Verge
  • Andrew Liszewski

    Andrew Liszewski

    The Key Boy reimagines the Nintendo Game Boy as a keyboard.

    Feeling nostalgic for the Game Boy’s glossy purple buttons? The Key Boy is a custom wireless keyboard, designed and built by YouTube’s The Lesser The Besser, that swaps traditional keycaps for 3D-printed recreations of the Game Boy’s controls, as spotted by Retro Dodo.

    The Key Boy may not offer an ideal typing experience, but it looks great, and was cleverly designed as a shell that simply wraps around a Logitech K380 wireless keyboard.

  • Nathan Edwards

    Nathan Edwards

    Turn out the lights and I’ll glow.

    The Classic-GLO is an $89 glow-in-the-dark mechanical keyboard kit from Novelkeys. It’s just as fun to build and nice to type on as the Classic-TKL I tested and really liked last year, and now it glows in the dark. You know, just in case you need a little more joy on your desk. It comes in three colors, and I tried them all. Check it out:

  • Andrew Liszewski

    Andrew Liszewski

    Build your own macrodata refinement keyboard.

    The retrofuturistic computers used by Lumon employees in Severance are loosely based on the Data General Dasher terminals released in the late ‘70s. Signature Plastics, the same company responsible for the SA profile keycaps used on those terminals, is now selling a matching set of keycaps so you can upgrade your mechanical keyboard with Lumon aesthetics. The SA Macrodata Refinement set is available for preorder now for $197, and expected to ship in Q1 2025.

    <em>You’ll need to provide your own keyboard for Signature Plastics’ new SA Macrodata Refinement keycap set.</em>
    <em>The keycaps are made from double-shot ABS plastic.</em>
    <em>Signature Plastics also sells a matching <a href="https://spkeyboards.com/products/scary-numbers-macrodata-refinement">Scary Numbers</a> 32-inch wide desk mat for $29.</em>
    1/3
    You’ll need to provide your own keyboard for Signature Plastics’ new SA Macrodata Refinement keycap set.
    Image: Signature Plastics
  • Nathan Edwards

    Nathan Edwards

    The keyboard from 2005 with 113 tiny OLED screens.

    Art Lebedev’s expensive Optimus keyboards seemed like a footnote in tech blogging history until a small German company saw the potential for a new generation of content creators.

    close-up render of Optimus Maximus macro column with six keys visible. The keys each have an OLED screen in them, displaying 2000s-era icons including iTunes, Internet Explorer, and Quicktime.
    Image: Art Lebedev
  • Andrew Liszewski

    Andrew Liszewski

    Freewrite’s latest keyboard has a mechanical word-counter to track your writing

    An overhead photo of the Astrohaus Wordrunner mechanical keyboard.
    An overhead photo of the Astrohaus Wordrunner mechanical keyboard.
    The Astrohaus Wordrunner keyboard will be available through a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign in February.
    Image: Astrohaus

    Astrohaus has announced a new addition to its distraction-reducing Freewrite line of writing tools at CES. Unlike its previous all-in-one devices that pair a keyboard with basic monochromatic screens, its new Freewrite Wordrunner is a standalone mechanical keyboard customized with keys and tools designed to help writers stay focused and work more efficiently.

    The company hasn’t announced pricing for the new Freewrite Wordrunner yet, but it’s expected to be available for preorder sometime in February 2025 through a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign. The company’s all-in-one writing devices range in price from $349 to $999, but without a screen, storage, and other electronics, its keyboard will potentially be much cheaper. Discounts will be available to early backers, but Astrohaus is also currently selling $1 refundable reservations that promise “priority access” and “exclusive early-bird pricing.”

    Read Article >
  • Sean Hollister

    Sean Hollister

    A better look at the zany ergo keyboard with Wolverine claw action.

    I showed you the AutoKeybo right after I tried it, but here’s a video that gives you a better idea of how it works!

    I think they need to build a proper cyberdeck out of this, something a bit more Ghost in the Shell. Maybe an Angry Miao collab?

  • Sean Hollister

    Sean Hollister

    The AutoKeybo is the keyboard for people who dream of Wolverine.

    What if your keyboard were a pair of retractable claws with a giant touchpad and numpad lurking underneath? What if they were controlled by an AI camera watching your hands so you could “Escape hundreds of manual/hand transfers across the interface each day!”? Also, what if it cost $700?

    It’s supposed to be “automatic” and “natural” — feels like there’s a bit of a learning curve to me.

    The AutoKeybo.
    The AutoKeybo.
    GIF by Sean Hollister / The Verge
  • Jess Weatherbed

    Jess Weatherbed

    This solid aluminum keyboard costs as much as a MacBook Pro

    The Icebreaker keyboard by Serene Industries on a desk.
    The Icebreaker keyboard by Serene Industries on a desk.
    Image: Serene Industries

    If statement keyboards are your thing and you have some serious cash to burn, you should check out this brutalist flagship offering from Serene Industries. The Icebreaker is a wedge-shaped mechanical keyboard constructed from a single block of CNC-machined aluminum, featuring hot-swappable aluminum keycaps with configurable RGB backlighting.

    Preorders are available now, with pricing starting at $1,500 for the wired version. A Bluetooth wireless and a wired version with magnetic hall effect switches are also available for $1,600 — the same price as a new 14-inch M4 MacBook Pro. The keyboard base comes in two colors — clear or black — with the latter option costing an additional $500. Serene Industries hasn’t provided an ETA on delivery, but says production will begin when pre-orders close on January 28th.

    Read Article >
  • Andrew Liszewski

    Andrew Liszewski

    8BitDo added RGB backlights to the new Xbox version of its mechanical keyboard

    A pair of hands typing on the 8BitDo Retro 87 Mechanical Keyboard - Xbox Edition while it’s glowing green.
    A pair of hands typing on the 8BitDo Retro 87 Mechanical Keyboard - Xbox Edition while it’s glowing green.
    The keyboard features eight RGB lighting modes that shine through the translucent keycaps.
    Image: 8BitDo

    8BitDo has announced a new version of its mechanical keyboard with a design inspired by the transparent green edition of Microsoft’s original Xbox console. The 8BitDo Retro 87 Mechanical Keyboard - Xbox Edition features a transparent green shell and matching keycaps similar to the console. But unlike previous iterations of the keyboard, this is the first from 8BitDo to incorporate RGB backlighting.

    The Xbox Edition mechanical keyboard is now available for preorder through Amazon for $119.99 with shipping expected to start on January 16th, 2025. 8BitDo also announced the matching 8BitDo Retro R8 Mouse alongside the keyboard, which is also listed on Amazon, but not available for preorder yet.

    Read Article >
  • Nathan Edwards

    Nathan Edwards

    This killer translucent keyboard kit is on sale for $95

    Bright orange keyboard on a bamboo desktop.
    Bright orange keyboard on a bamboo desktop.
    Buying a new keyboard probably won’t make you happy. But this one is orange.
    Photo by Nathan Edwards / The Verge

    The Omnitype Bauer Lite, one of my favorite keyboards of the year, is down to just $95 ($25 off) this week as part of Omnitype’s ongoing Black Friday sale. I paid full price for mine earlier this year, and it was a steal. It feels great to type on, it has a great layout, it’s customizable and fun to build, and it’s colorful. What’s not to love?

    The Bauer Lite has a plastic case that comes in a bunch of fantastic translucent colors, from clear to atomic purple to bright blue, seafoam, coral, dark red, and my personal favorite: neon orange. This is great news if your brain, like mine, can sometimes be tricked into feeling a little happier by a jolt of fluorescent color.

    Read Article >
  • Umar Shakir

    Umar Shakir

    Apple’s new Magic Keyboard, Magic Mouse, and Magic Trackpad have USB-C

    Apple’s new USB-C mouse and keyboard
    Apple’s new USB-C mouse and keyboard
    Image: Apple

    Apple is finally removing the Lightning port from its lineup of Mac accessories. Earlier today, the company announced a new iMac with M4 with updated versions of the Magic Keyboard, Magic Mouse, and Magic Trackpad that all have USB-C. Apple is also selling them individually in the Apple Store. All three have featured the proprietary Lightning port since 2015.

    The prices haven’t changed from their Lightning versions: the USB-C Magic Mouse is $99; the Magic Keyboard, which is so far seemingly only available as the larger model with a numpad, is $199; and the Magic Trackpad is $149. All three are available in black or white. USB-C aside, their designs are overall unchanged. And after tapping the “View in your space” link to look at the 3D model on the mobile version of the iMac page, I regret to inform you that means the Magic Mouse still charges via a USB-C port on the bottom. (There are ways to fix that if you’re desperate.)

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  • This $655 keyboard is wired-only because it has to power 389 LEDs.

    Angry Miao’s Neon 80 mechanical keyboard has:

    ⌨️ A tenkeyless layout
    🕳️ 3,120 drilled holes for its light show
    🌈 QMK / Vial support for customizing keys and lighting
    🔊 A near-identical sound and typing feel to the RGB 65
    💸 A starting price of $515 or $655 with keycaps and switches, launching November 5th on Indiegogo

    I’ll let pictures do the rest of the talking.

    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    Close-up details of the Angry Miao Neon 80 mechanical keyboard. The white keyboard has 3,120 tiny drilled holes in the top forehead of its white case, shining RGB lighting from 389 LEDs through them and its clear keycaps.
    1/10Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge
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