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Keychron Q16 HE 8K brings ceramic design and 8K speed to the table

Ana sayfa / News

Keychron Q16 HE 8K is shaping up to be one of the most interesting keyboards of the year. This 65% layout model doesn’t just sport a magnetic Hall effect setup and adjustable actuation, it’s also reportedly the world’s first keyboard made entirely from ceramic, chassis and keycaps included.

Announced via Keychron’s official X account, the Q16 HE 8K breaks away from aluminum norms and steps into full ceramic territory. The material isn’t just aesthetic; it promises a cooler surface feel, deeper acoustics, and a smoother touch when typing. The Cherry-profile keycaps are ceramic as well, and combined with a north-facing RGB layout, they pop with extra clarity.

This isn’t Keychron’s first foray into high-end builds, but the Q16 HE 8K feels like a sharp pivot into enthusiast-grade hardware. Previous drops like the K9 Max and DayZ-themed Lemokey P1 HE targeted niche audiences, but the Q16 aims higher with ceramic flair and serious performance muscle.

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Beneath the surface, this keyboard uses the Lime Magnetic Hall effect switches, the same ones featured in the Lemokey L5 HE 8K. These switches offer adjustable actuation from 0.1 mm to 4 mm, in minuscule 0.01 mm increments. That’s paired with an 8K polling rate, giving it the kind of responsiveness that can genuinely compete with leading esports models.

Keychron has included hot-swappable support, factory-lubed stabilizers, and pro gamer staples like Snap Tap and rapid trigger. Combined with software-tuned keystroke layering, the Q16 HE 8K gives players precision down to the press.

This is the first time ceramic has been used throughout a board’s structure, not just the keycaps. It’s an expensive material, but it brings a different kind of tactility and sound profile, more “thock,” less “ping.” That makes the Q16 HE 8K a potential hit among typing connoisseurs, not just gamers.

Here’s a quick rundown of what the Q16 HE 8K offers:

Despite the reveal, Keychron hasn’t disclosed how much the Q16 HE 8K will cost. Given the ceramic materials and feature set, it likely won’t land in the budget category. The keyboard will launch on Kickstarter in October, with black and white colorways teased so far. Interested buyers can sign up on Prelaunch for more details.

If the Q16 HE 8K lands with the polish it promises, this could mark the moment ceramic keyboards move from novelty to mainstream. Between the 8K polling, magnetic switches, and a chassis that sounds and feels different from anything else, Keychron’s latest might just hit the sweet spot between form and function. Fast clicks meet cold ceramic.

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