Best Gaming Keyboards 2024, Your keyboard is the part of your PC you touch the most: it’s your primary connection to everything. A new keyboard will deliver a more immediately-noticeable difference than just about any other upgrade.
Finding the right keyboard is even more critical for gamers: you need a keyboard that’s not only comfortable and easy to type on, but one that also delivers the perfect amount of tactile feedback, with zero latency, for speed and accuracy. Your keyboard is your main sidekick as you navigate complicated battle maps or vast open worlds — so you don’t want to make this choice lightly.
We’ve tested all sorts of gaming keyboards, in every size, color, and style, and these are the best of the best for every playstyle.
Best Mainstream Gaming Keyboard
The HyperX Alloy Origins is compact, well-built, and reasonably priced
The HyperX Alloy Origins’ compact and quality build makes it the best gaming keyboard for mainstream gamers who just want to get down to gaming. It’s comfortable, with a premium look and feel, from its keys to its frame and vibrant RGB lighting. If you’re familiar with linear switches, which are quick but offer little feedback, you’ll feel right at home with HyperX’s red linear switches. We also tested the clickier version, which uses HyperX’s aqua switches and is also available at Amazon and HyperX’s store.
For over $100, you can find gaming keyboards with more luxuries, such as media control buttons, a USB pass-through port (for easily plugging in another accessory, like your best gaming mouse), and more advanced software. The Alloy Origins is definitely a no-frills keyboard — but what it does offer, it executes very well.
If you’re not looking for a full-size keyboard, HyperX does offer smaller (and cheaper) versions of this keyboard. We’ve also tested the HyperX Alloy Origins 65 and the mini HyperX Alloy Origins 60, and HyperX also offers a TKL version — the HyperX Alloy Origins Core.
Best Feature-Packed Gaming Keyboard Splurge
The Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro is worth the splurge
The Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro is the ultimate full-size, feature-packed, customizable gaming keyboard to outfit your battlestation. It’s got everything you could need or want, including eight dedicated macro keys, a programmable multi-function “Razer Command Dial,” four dedicated media keys and a volume roller, and a plush, padded detachable wrist rest that lights up when you connect it to the keyboard.
The BlackWidow V4 Pro is a wired keyboard that comes with Razer Green (clicky) or Razer Yellow (linear) mechanical switches. It features an aluminum alloy top plate, doubleshot ABS keycaps, and has bright, per-key RGB as well as underglow (with a total of 38 zones when the wrist rest is connected). It’s not our favorite gaming keyboard for typing (that’s up next), but the typing experience is decent: the Razer Green switches we tested are tactile, clicky, and loud, and the case has two layers of dampening foam.
The main downside of this keyboard is its size: it will take up a large portion of your desk, especially if you use it with the detachable wrist rest. At $230, it’s also pretty pricey — and those extra buttons and dials are only worth it if you actually end up using them.
Best Budget Gaming Keyboard
3. Aukey KM-G17
Best Budget Keyboard
Specifications
Switches: Aukey Blue clicky mechanical switches
Backlight: RGB backlighting
Type: Full-size
Size: 18.1 x 7.8 x 1.4 inches
Weight: 2.5 pounds (1,134g)
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An abundance of RGB lighting
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Dedicated macro keys and volume knob for additional inputs
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Solid construction with no pinging
Reasons to avoid
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ABS keycaps
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Cable is thick, unwieldy and can’t be detached
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Non-removable palm rest
The Aukey KM-G17 is everything you want — and more (maybe too much more) — in a full-size mechanical gaming keyboard. It’s a big keyboard, measuring 18.1 inches wide, 7.8 inches deep, and 1.4 inches tall — bigger than most full-size keyboards, thanks to its extra keys and non-removable palm rest. It has five macro keys, media keys, and a volume knob along the top, and attractive diffused RGB lighting along the sides. It comes with Aukey’s blue clicky mechanical switches, which have an actuation force of 50g and 1.9mm of pretravel.
The KM-G17 won’t save you desk space, but it will save you money: it retails for just $60, and can often be found on sale for a little over half that price. Subsequently, you shouldn’t be too surprised to learn that it doesn’t have the bells and whistles of a premium gaming keyboard — namely, it has a plastic chassis and ABS plastic keycaps, a thick non-detachable USB cable, just one RGB lighting zone, and it’s clunkier overall than higher-end gaming keyboards.
Still, it’s got what you need for gaming: full n-key rollover, a 1,000 Hz polling rate, and a built-in gaming mode. All of the keys are programmable using the keyboard’s dedicated software, which lets you record macros, change the lighting effect, and save 10+ profiles to the keyboard’s onboard storage.
Best RGB in a Gaming Keyboard
The Roccat Vulcan II Max is flashy and beautiful
4. Roccat Vulcan II Max
Best Looking Gaming Keyboard
Specifications
Switches: Roccat Titan II Optical (Red or Brown)
Backlight: Per-key RGB
Type: Full-size
Size: 18.23 x 6.0625 x 1.32 inches / 463 x 154 x 33.5 mm
Weight: 2.29lbs / 1040g (without accessories)
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Bright, attractive lighting looks great on wrist rest
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Linear or tactile switch options
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Dedicated media keys and built-in secondary functions
Reasons to avoid
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Fixed cable with dual USB connectors
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Annoying Software
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Slippery ABS keycaps
The Roccat Vulcan II Max is designed to dazzle you: This full-size wired keyboard not only features bright, per-key RGB lighting, which is on maximum display thanks to the keyboard’s flat, shallow keycaps; 24 of its switches also have dual-LEDs. The Vulcan II Max comes with a detachable silicone wrist rest that serves as a conduit for the keyboard’s lighting (it’s beautiful), and features dedicated media keys and a clickable volume knob.
This is an attractive, unique-looking keyboard even without lighting — it has a slim, lightweight chassis with an aluminum alloy top plate, and flat, chiclet-y keycaps that leave the switches entirely exposed. The keyboard has 24 pre-programmed multi-function “smart” dual-LED keys, which light up to indicate secondary keybinds and can also change colors to display real-time info, such as headset or mouse battery life. The keyboard features Roccat’s Aimo lighting experience, which is an “intelligent” lighting system that interacts with, and reacts to, the user (and adapts over time). It’s definitely a dazzling alternative to the typical spectrum cycling, and it’s even more dazzling when paired with the Vulcan II Max’s translucent wrist rest.
If you’re looking for a hypnotizing light show, look no further. The Vulcan II Max comes in both black and white colorways, with Roccat’s Titan II optical switches in red (linear) or brown (tactile). If you’re looking to save desk space, there’s also the 65 percent Vulcan II Mini.
Best Wireless Gaming Keyboard
Asus‘s ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless gaming keyboard stands out compared to other wireless gaming keyboards, thanks to its well-built, sturdy (but not overly heavy) chassis, hot-swappable PCB, and impressive 1,500+ hour battery life (with the lighting turned off, naturally). The ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless is a wireless keyboard with tri-mode connectivity (2.4GHz wireless, Bluetooth 5.1, and wired via USB-C) and a 96-percent layout — a compact layout that retains the 10-key numberpad but takes up only slightly more space than the average TKL.
The ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless is housed in a plastic chassis with an aluminum alloy top plate and double-shot PBT keycaps. It measures 14.84 x 5.16 x 1.57 inches (377 x 131 x 40mm) and weighs 2.23 pounds (1012g) — it’s quite a bit smaller than, say, the full-size BlackWidow V4 Pro (which is 18.25 inches / 464mm long), but it has almost the same number of keys (less some of the navigation keys). It doesn’t have any dedicated macro keys, but it does manage to squeeze a multi-function key and volume roller in the upper right corner.
The ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless comes with Asus’s second-generation Asus ROG NX switches in Snow (linear), and it has a hot-swappable PCB — so you can swap in the mechanical switches of your choice. The keyboard offers a solid, low-latency wireless connection over Asus’s 2.4GHz Omni Receiver, and can get up to 1,500 hours of battery life over 2.4GHz wireless with the lighting turned off (about 90 hours with the lighting turned on).
Best TKL Gaming Keyboard
The SteelSeries Apex Pro TKL Wireless is a colorful TKL keyboard with optical switches and an OLED screen
6. SteelSeries Apex Pro TKL Wireless
Best TKL Gaming Keyboard
Specifications
Switches: SteelSeries OmniPoint 2.0
Backlight: Per-key RGB
Type: TKL
Size: 14 x 5.04 x 1.65 inche (355 x 128 x 42 mm)
Weight: 1.65lbs (747g) without cable
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Highly customizable
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Soft-touch magnetic wrist rest
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Attractive but a little generic-looking
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Excellent gaming performance
Reasons to avoid
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Expensive
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Feels hastily launched
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Buggier than usual
SteelSeries Apex Pro TKL Wireless gives you back some desk space as well as wireless freedom, thanks to built-in dual wireless (low-latency 2.4GHz and Bluetooth 5.0). The 2022 redesign of the Apex Pro TKL features a simple, elegant chassis with an aluminum alloy top plate, double-shot PBT keycaps, and SteelSeries newest OmniPoint 2.0 linear optical switches.
Optical switches technically have mechanical parts, but they’re not the same as mechanical switches — optical switches are actuated via light, while mechanical switches are actuated via physical force. Although this makes for a less-than-ideal typing experience, it’s good news for gamers: Optical switches are speedier (and less prone to failure) than their mechanical counterparts. The Apex Pro TKL Wireless’ OmniPoint 2.0 switches offer both adjustable actuation (37 levels) and dual-action actuation, which lets you assign two actions to one key (at different actuation levels).
The main downside of the Apex Pro TKL Wireless is its $250 asking price (the keyboard also comes in a wired version, for $180), which makes it one of the priciest gaming keyboards on this list. While the Apex Pro TKL Wireless comes with plenty of premium features and accessories — including a customizable OLED smart screen and a detachable magnetic wrist rest with a soft-touch finish — these might not be enough to justify its expense. If you’d like something a little less customizable (and you don’t mind being tethered), SteelSeries’ Apex 9 TKL has an almost-identical form factor with hot-swappable optical switches — and will only set you back $140.
Best Gaming Keyboard for Typing
The Asus ROG Azoth has a premium build, an OLED screen, and hot-swappable switches — and it comes with a whole host of accessories
Most gaming keyboards are designed for gaming, not typing. That doesn’t mean they’re bad for typing — they’re usually still pretty good (better than a non-mechanical keyboard, anyway), but they focus on gaming first and prioritize features like flashy RGB over tactile feel and sound. The Asus ROG Azoth, however, is one of the best keyboards for both gaming and typing that we’ve ever used — and we’re pretty impressed that it comes from a mainstream gaming company and not a boutique keyboard supplier.
The ROG Azoth is a gasket mount mechanical keyboard with a 75 percent form factor (that’s slightly smaller than a TKL). It’s wireless, with both 2.4GHz wireless and Bluetooth connectivity, and it features doubleshot PBT keycaps, a metal top plate, and three layers of sound dampening foam inside its plastic chassis (plastic so as not to interfere with the wireless signal). It comes with Asus NX switches in Red (linear), Brown (tactile), or Blue (clicky), and Asus packages it with a full accessory kit, which includes keycap and switch pullers, extra switches, and a DIY lube station so you can have ultimate control of the keyboard’s sound and feel.
It’s an excellent keyboard for typing, but it’s also great for gaming — thanks to its reliable, low-latency 2.4GHz wireless connection, snappy responsiveness, and incredible battery life (up to 2,000 hours over 2.4GHz, with both lighting and the OLED screen turned off). It also offers decent customization via a 2-inch OLED screen that can be programmed to display everything from a random GIF to current system info.
Best Low Profile Gaming Keyboard
The Logitech G915 Lightspeed is slim, speedy, and wireless
If you want the speed and slimness afforded by low-profile mechanical switches, the Logitech G915 Lightspeed is the best gaming keyboard you can buy. This is a premium gaming experience through and through. That means a row of G macro keys for leveraging during battle, dedicated media controls, including an epic volume wheel roller, and even multiple connectivity options. You can go tried-and-true wired, use Logitech’s reliable dongle connection, or store the dongle in the keyboard’s built-in compartment and use Bluetooth. This makes connecting to multiple devices a little easier too.
The G915 Lightspeed has earned a popular reputation but comes at a price. Despite its $250 MSRP, there’s no wrist rest, USB passthrough or premium keycaps resistant to smudging. As mentioned in our Logitech G915 TKL review, the smaller version of this keyboard is more affordable but foregoes even more luxuries, most noticeably G keys.
But in addition to being a top-notch gaming peripheral, the G915 Lightspeed (and G915 TKL) offers a surprisingly good typing experience for a low-profile keyboard. We’ve tested it with Logitech’s tactile low-profile switches for days and haven’t felt much extra exhaustion or like we were typing through sand, like we’ve suffered through on other low-profile keyboards.
Best Mini Gaming Keyboard
The SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini is a small keyboard that’s packed with functionality (Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
9. SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini
Best Mini Gaming Keyboard
Specifications
Switches: SteelSeries OmniPoint 2.0
Backlight: Per-Key RGB
Type: 60%
Size: 11.53 x 4.02 x 1.59 inches / 293 x 103 x 40.3mm
Weight: 1.34lbs / 610g (wired) 1.2lbs / 543g (wireless)
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Feels great and intuitive for gaming
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Highly customizable
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Bright, attractive RGB
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Feels sturdy but isn’t too heavy
Reasons to avoid
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Dual actuation has a learning curve
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SteelSeries GG has some bugs
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Legends for secondary keybinds are hard to see
Ultra-compact keyboards aren’t for everyone, but if you have limited desk space or you’re looking for a gaming keyboard that’s travel-friendly, a 60 percent keyboard can be a godsend. You’ll have to give up a lot — number pad, navigation keys, function keys, and even arrow keys — but you’ll barely notice these sacrifices with the right keyboard.
SteelSeries’ Apex Pro Mini Wireless (also comes in a wired version) is the right keyboard.
The Apex Pro Mini Wireless is a sleek, sturdily-built 60 percent keyboard featuring SteelSeries OmniPoint 2.0 switches, which feature both adjustable actuation and dual actuation (much like the Razer Huntsman Mini Analog). Because it’s so small, the Apex Pro Mini Wireless has a slew of default secondary keybinds, which are printed on the sides of the keycaps and activated using SteelSeries SS function key. These secondary keybinds are so intuitive (and can also be remapped, if you want) that you won’t feel limited by the 60 percent layout. The keyboard is highly customizable: Almost every key can be remapped (first and secondary keybinds), have its actuation point adjusted, and have its RGB set – individually.
If anything, the Apex Pro Mini Wireless might have too much going for it — maybe you don’t need an ultra-compact keyboard with every single feature shoved into it (especially considering its premium price point). If you don’t need all of these features and you’d like to spend a little less, try the SteelSeries Apex 9 series, which comes has adjustable actuation, hot-swappable switches, and comes in both Mini and TKL layouts.
Quick Shopping Tips
☑ Clicky Tactile: Blue, Green, White
☑ Quiet Tactile: Brown, Clear
☑ Linear (quiet and go straight down): Red, Silver
If you don’t want to commit, a hot-swappable keyboard will let you swap out switches easily.
Savings on the Best Gaming Keyboards
Whether you’re shopping for one of the best gaming keyboards we listed above or a different model, you may find some discounts by checking out our list of Corsair coupon codes, Newegg promo codes or Razer coupon codes.
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