Skip to main content

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.

A
Andrew Liszewski
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.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

<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
A
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
This $299 mechanical keyboard has a giant glowing knob.

The Yoga Creative Keyboard Angry Miao Edition is Lenovo’s latest collaboration with Angry Miao. Based on the Dry Studio ATM 98, it features silent switches, a translucent top, and an oversize RGB-illuminated volume knob that’s customizable to control creative apps. Lenovo’s model adds a USB-C hub and a key for audio controls on select Yoga devices.

<em>The top half of the case is see-through plastic, allowing the per-key RGB lighting to shine. The bottom half is aluminum, and the whole keyboard weighs a hefty 5.73 pounds / 2.6kg.</em>
<em>The ring-shaped knob controls volume by default, but Lenovo indicates it can be used for functions like controlling playheads in video or audio editing apps.</em>
<em>There’s more RGB lighting within the knob itself. Because of course.</em>
<em>The 1800 layout offers a number pad in a slightly smaller package than full-size keyboards.</em>
<em>Two USB-C data ports allow the keyboard to act like a mini hub. The scare quotes make this “hub” look a bit sarcastic, but it sounds genuinely useful.</em>
<em>Lenovo didn’t specify what switches are in its new keyboard, but they look just like the <a href="https://mechanicalkeyboards.com/products/bsun-light-sakura-silent-37g-linear-pcb-mount-switch" target="_blank">Bsun Light Sakura silent linear switches</a> in the <a href="https://store.dry---studio.com/products/atm-98?srsltid=AfmBOoq4ZewMR_9zElyqjbaIXENnn9ZenHg6AIuRD5CGpVTIes7as8y7&variant=53076946944273#:~:text=Bsun%20Light%20Sakura%20Switch%3A%20Smooth%20and%20Silent" target="_blank">ATM 98</a>.</em>
1/6
The top half of the case is see-through plastic, allowing the per-key RGB lighting to shine. The bottom half is aluminum, and the whole keyboard weighs a hefty 5.73 pounds / 2.6kg.
Image: Lenovo
This DIY kit turned my favorite mechanical keyboard into my favorite electrocapacitive keyboard

The DynaCap system lets you combine the best qualities of Topre and MX keyboards for a semi-reasonable price.

Nathan Edwards
The best tech announced at CES 2026 so far

Smart lights that know where they’re placed in a room, wild designs for next-gen routers, and a glowing inedible donut.

Andrew Liszewski
A
Instagram
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
I’m pleased to inform you that HP’s computer-in-a-keyboard doesn’t suck to type on.

The HP Eliteboard G1a plays a bit off the old Commodore 64 formula of a desktop computer built into a keyboard, but for office use in 2026. While I feel it’s a charming and quirky idea, I was prepared to hate the typing feel of this latticeless membrane keyboard.

After trying it briefly? It’s serviceable.

A
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Epomaker’s new mechanical keyboard has an ambidextrous number pad.

Dear numpad diehards, here’s a keyboard we can both enjoy. The Epomaker RT98 is a wireless mechanical keyboard featuring a repositionable number pad. You can move it to right or lefthanded positions by unscrewing the keyboard’s base plate. There’s also a detachable retro TV-style LCD. Because why not?

Pricing isn’t available yet, but it should launch soon on Kickstarter.

<em>The Epomaker RT98 (center).</em>
<em>The little retro-inspired screen shows settings, and users can upload animated GIFs to loop on it.</em>
<em>The LCD connects via magnetic pogo pins, so you can remove it. But an Epomaker rep said it doesn’t have other accessories to put there yet.</em>
<em>To move the number pad you’ll have to unscrew the bottom base plate.</em>
1/4
The Epomaker RT98 (center).
Photo: Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge
D
Quote
Dominic Preston
A new language.

My colleague Terrence waxed poetic about his portable mechanical keyboard over the weekend, which he pairs with a compact E Ink screen to work on the go, a reminder that every day we stray further from God’s light.

Sam 3K:

The NyPhy Air60 V2 keyboard, when paired with a Boox Palma 2” a real “none of these words are in the Bible” moment

Get the day’s best comment and more in my free newsletter, The Verge Daily.

D
Twitter
Dominic Preston
Three years later, the Centerpiece starts shipping.

Not vaporware after all, huh? Finalmouse’s keyboard, which features a full display underneath its transparent keycaps and switches, was announced in December 2022, and due “early 2023.” Now, three years on, the company says it’s shipping the first units to backers.

This keyboard and trackball combo is for the tinkerers

7

Verge Score

ZSA’s Voyager keyboard and Navigator trackball attachment are a lot of fun, if you’re willing to put in some effort.

Jay Peters
Wooting’s 60HE v2 is a solid upgrade to the best gaming keyboard

Wooting has done a great job improving the sound and feel of its popular keyboard.

Tom Warren
A
Andrew Liszewski
Samsung’s new compact wireless keyboard is lighter than Logitech’s.

At 218 grams the $109.99 Samsung Smart Keyboard is over 288 grams lighter than Logitech’s MX Keys Mini but can also connect and switch between three Bluetooth devices. It’s powered by a CR2032 coin cell battery and includes shortcuts for accessing Bixby, Gemini, or Copilot when connected to a PC.

<em>Instead of a rechargeable battery like Logitech uses, Samsung has opted for a coin cell battery in its new compact wireless keyboard but it didn’t share details on battery life.</em>
<em>The keyboard includes three customizable function keys for launching apps and shortcuts for summoning AI assistants.</em>
1/2
Instead of a rechargeable battery like Logitech uses, Samsung has opted for a coin cell battery in its new compact wireless keyboard but it didn’t share details on battery life.
Image: Samsung
The Asus Falcata is a Hall effect split ergo gaming keyboard that falls short

7

Verge Score

Asus brought Hall effect customization to a split ergo board, but it didn’t go hard enough on ergonomics.

Cameron Faulkner
J
Jess Weatherbed
Is gold your type?

For employees at Insta360, that would be a very literal question. The Chinese camera company recently gave 21 staffers a bonus in the form of gold keycaps, the heaviest being the space key, which South China Morning Post reports weighs 35.02 grams and is valued at $45,000.

A photo of gold keycaps given as a bonus to Insta360 employees.
And by the look of it, the keycaps are actually functional.
Image: Sohu
J
Jess Weatherbed
Tippy tappy ASMR.

My colleague Antonio included several audio recordings of himself typing on various mechanical keyboards in his fall upgrades feature, and they’re delightfully therapeutic. Listen to this roundup below, or check out his article to listen to them individually.

D
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.

Nathan Edwards
Norbauer Seneca review: a $3,600 luxury keyboard for the keyboard obsessed0

An elegant weapon, from a more civilized age.

Nathan Edwards