The Best Hall Effect Keyboards for Gamers and Serious Typists

Ascend from your mechanical keyboard to magnetically powered Hall effect switches.

Featured in this article

Best Full-Size HE Keyboard
Keychron Q5 HE and Q6 HE Wireless Keyboards
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Best TKL HE Keyboard
Wooting 80HE
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Best Compact HE Keyboard
Asus ROG Falchion Ace HFX
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Other Hall Effect Keyboards to Consider

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Steelseries Apex Pro Mini Gen 3

SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini Gen 3 for $220: The Apex Pro Mini (6/10, WIRED Review) is a perfectly serviceable HE keyboard with solid switches, fast refresh rates, and useful features like rapid trigger and mis-input protection. However, the build quality is a bit underwhelming for the price, and SteelSeries’ GG software can be tedious at times to use. The Apex Pro Mini uses a tray mount with standard GH60 mounting points. This means the typing experience feels a bit stiff compared to gasket-mounting, but it can easily be customized with aftermarket cases. While it’s ultimately a serviceable keyboard, I can’t recommend it at MSRP. Wait until this one is on sale.

Elecom VK720A for $180: As one of the few Hall effect keyboards on this list to use a non-Gateron switch, this keyboard stands out against the competition. The switches are solid and smooth, and the keyboard feels good to type on. It has some fun quirks, like swappable spacebars and a set of keycaps that were designed specifically for gaming (which work very well for that). A lack of wireless connectivity and a middling build quality knock it down a peg, but it’s a solid option nonetheless.

Avoid These Keyboards

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Corsair K70 Pro TKL

Corsair K70 Pro TKL: If you’re only kind of looking for a Hall effect keyboard, the Corsair K70 Pro TKL (5/10, WIRED Review) might be for you. The center cluster of keys uses Hall effect switches, but the entire outside of this keyboard uses standard mechanical switches. While this isn’t a huge issue if you only use the center cluster of keys, it still results in inconsistent customization options and a keyboard that has two separate typing feels between the main keys and the peripheral ones. Plus, if you adjust the actuation distance of your HE switches, you’ll be stuck with a large number of keys around the outside that perform entirely differently than them, which I didn’t enjoy when I tested this keyboard. If you like the design, I’d recommend saving a few dollars and going for the Core TKL Wireless model instead. It adds Bluetooth and 2.4-GHz connectivity, and it has a consistent typing feel with standard mechanical switches across the entire board.

SteelSeries Apex Pro TKL: SteelSeries seemingly made the same mistake as Corsair, also opting to have only the central cluster of keys use HE switches. This keyboard has a few advantages over Corsair’s version, however, like an OLED display that adds a bit of fun and functionality. However, I really can’t recommend this model over SteelSeries’ 60% HE keyboard, since you’re getting just as many Hall effect switches in a much more compact form factor.


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