1
Keychron Q1 Pro
A heavy aluminum gasket-mounted 75% with excellent build, fast Bluetooth switching and a satisfying typing feel that ranks as many people's favorite board. It rewards tinkering with mods to sound its best.
68%
71
2
Keychron K2 Pro
A comfortable, customizable 75% board most users love, with hot-swap switches and solid sound, though scattered reports cite dead keys, Bluetooth failures, and case warping over time.
65%
46
3
NuPhy Air75 V2
Praised for its low-profile feel, looks, and switch options, but firmware and connectivity are the persistent complaints: dropped wireless, ghost/repeating keys, and battery issues that custom firmware often can't fully fix.
60%
203
4
Keychron V3 Max
Great build and typing feel for the price, but a recurring double-typing/double-input bug plagues a large share—often returning across multiple replacement boards.
50%
34
5
NuPhy Air75 V3
Owners love how this board looks and how soft and satisfying it feels to type on, and plenty have used it daily for months without a single complaint. But a real share of buyers run into switch double-typing or chatter, pingy metallic spring noise, and uneven switch quality that sometimes persists even after replacements, along with finicky 2.4GHz and Bluetooth reconnects and a wobbly knob. It really comes down to the luck of the draw: a good unit is one of the best low-profile keyboards around, while a bad one can feel like a pricey letdown.
40%
90
6
Glorious GMMK Pro
A heavy, premium-feeling hot-swap board with deep customization, but the software is widely criticized and many units develop sticking keys, gummy stabilizers, or other QC faults.
29%
147