⌨️ Elevate your desk game with buttery-smooth clicks and wireless freedom!
The KN85 Wireless Mechanical Keyboard combines tri-mode connectivity (Bluetooth 5.0, 2.4GHz, USB-C) with a compact 75% layout and a robust 4000mAh battery lasting up to a week. Its gasket-mounted design and sound-dampening layers create a premium creamy typing experience with satisfying thocky feedback. Featuring hot-swappable pre-lubed linear switches and customizable RGB lighting with dedicated software, it’s the perfect blend of style, comfort, and versatility for gamers and professionals alike.
A**O
Fantastically good!
I hadn't bought a new keyboard for a few years, and didn't expect to since the ones I already had were pretty good. Then I saw a review of this one on youtube, and though I would give it a try.They don't include the spare key switches and alternate coloured key caps any longer, but that's not really an issue. What is - or might be for some - is the lack of driver software to do all the clever stuff creating light shows, macros and the like. It can be downloaded though when you can find it!In use, this is astonishingly good for a keyboard that costs $49. It is an all-plastic design, which doesn't inspire confidence on first sight, but it is in fact rigid and very solidly made. Unlike a lot of mechanical keyboards, this doesn't have the switches exposed but encased as is more common generally, so it doesn't look all that remarkable. Looks can be deceiving though, because this one not only has USB, wireless (with included dongle) and BlueTooth connectivity, with up to three BT pairings, but it also has the feel of a good 1980's style keyboard, though with backlighting and a gloriously wide variety of lighting effects.The keys are hot swappable, and the backlights are 'south facing' so even though they don't shine through the keycaps, they do illuminate very nicely.It can be a bit hit or miss to get the pattern you want, or indeed to have a solid all-on backlight in one or many colours, but it's well worth it for the visuals.And typing on it is fantastic. The feel is smooth and moderate so you know you've hit a key, and the sound is not loud, but very satisfyingly 'thocky'.Get one - it has a switch for PC or Mac use, and it connects to just about any computer, and if you take your keyboards seriously, you'll thank yourself!
L**X
Insane Value
This is a new standard for all plastic keyboards. Better than some keyboards that cost 10x as much. Honestly blown away. Sound, feel, stabilizers, features, everything. All of this with mostly uncompromised build quality and plastic that doesn't feel like $40 keyboard plastic. I prefer tactile switches and I still like this board. Unless you specifically play games that can take advantage of hall effect switches, or you just want a metal case, GET THIS KEYBOARD. Best stock prebuilt experience I've ever had. I own a wooting 80 he and several other $200-$1000 custom keyboards. This keyboard has damn near every feature of many of these boards AND 2 different wireless modes. I didn't believe Hipyo Tech in his video but I was very curious and was not disappointed. I did not receive the extra switches or key caps that some people did. This doesn't matter imo, because the switches themselves are more than worth the $40($50 as of writing) asking price. So even if you don't like the board long term you can take the switches out of the HOTSWAP pcb. The switches and design of the board give it a "thocky" or "creamy" sound profile. Deep, but not as deep as a gateron ink black. The pbt keycaps are surprisingly high quality(replaced with gmk zooted in photo) and don't need to be changed if customization is not important to you.The only bad things about this keyboard is the questionable software support, there is no need to mod/tinker with it, and that it is plastic. The kisnt(dot)cn website is blocked in most browsers. After getting on the site there is no link to the software in other reviews. At the time of writing the board doesn't support VIA. This is the type of board someone would get to figure out what they like in a keyboard but its too good and doesn't leave much for the user to experiment and add to make it sound or feel better. ITS $40-$50 OF COURSE ITS PLASTIC.What really blows my mind about this keyboard is the attention to detail. It seems that whatever design team worked on this is very in tune with custom keyboards as a hobby, unlike many larger brands.TLDR:UNBEATABLE BUDGET KING and new plastic keyboard standard.
S**2
love it, get it, it's on the cheap price point but great quality
Love it. Got it as a gift for my wife for work/travel, as her expensive one stays home, so I needed one for her to "if it breaks," I won't cry. She loves it; loves the feel and sound. I believe her coworkers also bought it. For the price, can't beat it, but maybe there are cheaper ones, but not sure if the quality would be the same. I got myself a version also, and my kid too, and so far it lasted the school year. worth it, not a regrettable purchase.
F**L
$35 Keyboard, $150 Experience – Just Bring a Charger!
After building my first gaming PC, my old Logitech keyboard-and-mouse combo suddenly felt like bringing a tricycle to a Formula 1 race. I dove headfirst into the world of mechanical keyboards, only to find most of the “good ones” priced like luxury handbags. Just when I was about to give up, I stumbled across a review that name-dropped this Kisnt keyboard. It wasn’t $35 at the time (thanks, inflation), but a couple weeks later it went on sale and boom, trigger pulled.Months later, I’m back to say: this keyboard slaps. The keys feel buttery smooth, the sound is creamy and satisfying (like rain on a tin roof if it had rhythm), and I now find myself writing things just for the excuse to type more. It’s the first keyboard that made me say, “Wow, I really get why people geek out over this stuff.”For gaming? Excellent. I was nervous about losing my number pad, but haven’t missed it once. The 75% layout is compact without feeling cramped, and the RGB lighting is stunning retro beige meets rave.Only downside? The battery life. I get maybe two weeks tops with full RGB on. But let’s be honest: if you want a light show every time you hit “WASD,” you’re going to pay with watts. I just keep it plugged in now and pretend it’s wired—but beautiful.Bottom line: This keyboard feels like a $150 custom board in disguise. A+ for the feel, look, and value. Just don’t forget your USB-C cable if you're in it for the long haul.
TrustPilot
1天前
1 周前