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Keyboards

Over the course of the day, many people type thousands of words onto a keyboard, whether it’s one physically built into a laptop or a standalone model. Alongside the mouse, they’re the most important peripherals for modern computers and have attracted a huge following of enthusiasts looking for the best typing experience. The Verge covers them all, from Apple’s latest wireless peripherals to clacky mechanical models with custom keycaps and switches designed by enthusiasts and sold through forums.

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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
How to build the best keyboard in the world

Ryan Norbauer spent half a decade and several hundred thousand dollars reinventing the keyboard. It worked.

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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>
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The Cleaver is available for preorder and will go into production a few weeks after launch.
Image: Serene Industries
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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
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Jess Weatherbed
SteelSeries introduces two new Apex Pro keyboards.

The $199.99 Mini Gen 3 is sporting the same Hall effect OmniPoint 3.0 key switches as the larger model that was released in September, allowing gamers to adjust actuation points from 4mm down to just 0.1mm. The TKL (tenkeyless) version of the Apex Pro Gen 3 is also now available in white for $219.99.

1/2Image: SteelSeries
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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
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Andrew Liszewski
This is my favorite upgrade on the new M4 MacBook Air.

The mute key’s label now features a speaker with a strike through it so it more closely resembles the icon that appears in macOS when pressed, as spotted by iCulture. Apple made the change on the new iPad Air’s Magic Keyboard, too.

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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.

Look at this keyboardLook at this keyboard
Keyboards
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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:

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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>
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You’ll need to provide your own keyboard for Signature Plastics’ new SA Macrodata Refinement keycap set.
Image: Signature Plastics
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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
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Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Move over Hall effect, inductive switches are arriving for mechanical keyboards.

Mechanical keyboards were trending toward Hall effect switches, but at CES Epomaker is following recent announcements from Ducky and hyping induction as the next big thing.

Epomaker will debut its induction switches in its upcoming Magcore 87 tenkeyless board, which should cost under $200 when it launches at the end of January.

An inductive keyboard switch held within a few fingertips.
<em>The induction switch (left) compared to a Hall effect switch (right).</em>
<em>Pressing down both a Hall effect switch (left) and an induction switch (right) shows the major difference in their center stems.</em>
1/5Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge
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Antonio G. Di Benedetto
This $239 keyboard looks like a cat and is furry like one too.

Dry Studio’s new mechanical keyboard is much more domesticated than its supercar-inspired one. The Petbrick 65 is a $239 small-format wireless board that comes in two color options: calico and “odd-eye” (like a black cat with heterochromia).

Each color includes a magnetic fluffy surround, so you can pet your cat-like board — with more colors coming later.

A pair of black and calico colored cat-like keyboards.
<em>A tease of more cat and holiday themed Petbrick keyboards to come.</em>
1/6Image; Dry Studio
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Nathan Edwards
This X-Wing keycap set gets it.

The SA X-Wing keycap set looks like it’s been through hell and patched up with whatever was on hand, just like a Rebel starfighter. It’s the rare Star Wars tie-in that feels like it understands the appeal of the universe.

The set isn’t new, but it’s on sale at Novelkeys for $75, from $225, which was enough to remind me how cool it is.

A thrown-together-looking set of keycaps in slightly different shades of beige, cream, white, and grey, with yellow, black, and orange accents, like a beat-up old X-Wing
Red Five, standing by.
Photo: Novelkeys
This killer translucent keyboard kit is on sale for $95This killer translucent keyboard kit is on sale for $95
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Antonio G. Di Benedetto
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
The best mechanical keyboards to buy right now

Whether wired, wireless, or low profile, here are our picks for the best readily available boards.

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Sean Hollister
Let’s follow Google’s lead — and celebrate wacky keyboard day instead of April Fools’.

Today I learned that after Google stopped doing April Fools’ jokes in 2021 — a change we lauded — its Japan division started revealing zany keyboards on October 1st (because 10/1 = 101 keys) instead. Find the latest below; previous entries include the Gboard Teacup, Gboard Stick and Gboard Cap.

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Andrew Liszewski
Modder gives a 38-year-old Apple keyboard a wireless upgrade.

The Apple IIGS (graphics and sound) debuted in 1986 with enhanced multimedia capabilities, but software developer Matt Chesters remembers it best for the sleek mechanical keyboard the computer shipped with.

In a 15-minute YouTube video they detail how they revived a used Apple Desktop Bus Keyboard and upgraded it with wireless Bluetooth connectivity, a rechargeable battery, a tiny OLED screen, and a dedicated volume control wheel.