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World of Software > News > The Best RGB Keyboards for 2025
News

The Best RGB Keyboards for 2025

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Last updated: 2025/05/06 at 11:22 PM
News Room Published 6 May 2025
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Deeper Dive: Our Top Tested Picks

EDITORS’ NOTE

May 6, 2025: We added the NZXT Function 2 Mini TKL as our pick for Best Budget RGB Mechanical Keyboard, replacing the Montech MKey. We also swapped in the Razer BlackWidow V4 75% Pro, in place of Razer’s non-Pro version of that keyboard, as our pick for Best Tenkeyless RGB Keyboard. Since our last update, we tested and evaluated 16 new keyboards for inclusion in this roundup.

  • Attractive design with gorgeous RGB lighting
  • Easy-Shift+ adds tons of functionality
  • Switches compatible with many third-party keycaps
  • Expensive
  • Keycaps could be more comfortable
  • No wireless connection options

Roccat’s pricey Vulcan II Max keyboard delivers an RGB light show like no other, but it’s not just a pretty face, with functionality to please power users and hard-core gamers alike.

Number of Keys

104

Interface

USB Wired

Key Switch Type

Titan II Optical

Key Backlighting

RGB Per-Key

Media Controls

Dedicated

Passthrough Ports

None

Palm Rest

Detachable (Separate)

Learn More

Roccat Vulcan II Max Review

Asus ROG Azoth keyboard

  • Highly compact footprint for the key count
  • Ultra-stable key switches with box stabilizers
  • Includes comprehensive starter tool kit for keyboard tweakers
  • OLED panel for adjusting media/volume or simple animations
  • Per-key RGB key backlighting
  • Hot-swappable
  • Pricey for a sawed-off keyboard
  • Delete-key placement less than optimal
  • Armoury Crate software is a heavy install

It may look unassuming, but the compact Asus ROG Azoth is a little dynamo of an enthusiast gaming keyboard, packing super-stable, satisfying key switches and a cornucopia of keycap and switch-tweaker tools.

Number of Keys

81

Interface

USB-C, 2.4 GHz Wireless, Bluetooth

Key Switch Type

Asus ROG NX Red

Key Backlighting

RGB Per-Key

Media Controls

Via integrated screen

Passthrough Ports

None

Palm Rest

None

Learn More

Asus ROG Azoth Review

The NZXT Function 2 Mini TKL

  • Hot-swappable key switches
  • Highly legible font on shine-through keycaps
  • Efficient key layout
  • Well-designed software utility
  • Volume roller
  • 8,000Hz polling rate
  • No USB pass-through port
  • No wrist rest
  • Key switches have slight pinging noise from the springs

The NZXT Function 2 Mini TKL is as small as a feature-packed tenkeyless keyboard can be, and sure to please discerning on-the-go gamers.

Number of Keys

87

Interface

USB-C

Key Switch Type

NZXT Swift Optical Switches

Key Backlighting

RGB Per-Key

Media Controls

Shared With Other Keys

Passthrough Ports

None

Palm Rest

None

Learn More

NZXT Function 2 Mini TKL Review

Razer BlackWidow V4 75% Pro

  • Immaculate typing feel
  • Hot-swappable key switches
  • Easy to pop open and tinker
  • Plush wrist rest
  • Gorgeous RGB lighting
  • Expensive
  • OLED display is monochrome, not color
  • Polling rate caps at 4,000Hz

Razer’s standout BlackWidow V4 gets an impressive Pro upgrade that adds even more functionality to an excellent foundation. Whether you’re a PC gaming enthusiast or a keyboard customizer, the V4 Pro 75% will dazzle.

Number of Keys

81

Interface

USB Wired, Bluetooth, 2.4 GHz Wireless

Key Switch Type

Razer Orange Tactile Mechanical Key Switch Gen-3

Key Backlighting

RGB Per-Key

Media Controls

Via integrated screen

Passthrough Ports

None

Palm Rest

Detachable (Magnetic)

Learn More

Razer BlackWidow V4 75% Pro Review

Fnatic Streak65

  • Compact, 65-percent design
  • Comfortable, low-profile switches
  • Four dedicated macro keys
  • Marked keycaps indicate essential function shortcuts
  • Limited customization options
  • Tightly packed keys

The Fnatic Streak65 has nearly everything that you’d want in a compact keyboard, including a top-tier typing feel, lightweight body, macro keys, and marked keycaps.

Number of Keys

68

Interface

USB Wired

Key Switch Type

Fnatic Speed

Key Backlighting

RGB Zonal

Media Controls

Shared With Other Keys

Passthrough Ports

None

Palm Rest

None

Learn More

Fnatic Streak65 Gaming Keyboard Review

Corsair K70 RGB Pro Mini Wireless

  • Excellent RGB implementation
  • Hot-swappable key switches
  • Included key cap and key switch puller
  • Bluetooth and 2.4GHz connection options
  • Compact and lightweight
  • Can create up to 50 user profiles via Corsair iCue app
  • Expensive
  • 8,000Hz polling maximum may be overkill

The feature-rich Corsair K70 RGB Pro Mini Wireless is a stunner and one of the finest 60% keyboards we’ve seen.

Number of Keys

61

Interface

USB-C, Bluetooth, RF Wireless

Key Switch Type

Cherry MX Speed Silver

Key Backlighting

RGB Per-Key

Media Controls

Shared With Other Keys

Passthrough Ports

None

Palm Rest

None

Learn More

Corsair K70 RGB Pro Mini Wireless Review

Kinesis Freestyle Edge RGB Split Gaming Keyboard - Top-Down Together

  • True Cherry MX switches in a choice of three varieties.
  • Comfortable ergonomic design, once you’re accustomed to it.
  • Superb, plush wrist rest.
  • Per-key customizable RGB lighting.
  • Driverless SmartSet app is more work than we’d like.
  • Optional “lift kit” costs extra.
  • Steep learning curve.

In the Freestyle Edge RGB, Kinesis brings best-in-class ergonomics to the gaming-keyboard scene for players serious about minding their wrists and hands in the course of their gaming endurathons.

Number of Keys

108

Interface

USB Wired

Key Switch Type

Cherry MX

Key Backlighting

RGB Per-Key

Media Controls

Dedicated

Passthrough Ports

None

Palm Rest

Integrated

Learn More

Kinesis Freestyle Edge RGB Split Mechanical Gaming Keyboard Review

Corsair K70 RGB Pro

  • Solidly built
  • Dedicated media keys
  • Volume roller
  • Detachable, braided USB cable
  • Per-key RGB backlighting
  • Up to 8,000Hz refresh rate
  • Expensive
  • “Hyper-polling” differences hard to detect

The Corsair K70 RGB Pro is a high-end gaming keyboard that offers a variety of mechanical switch options in a solidly built case, making it an excellent choice for deep-pocketed esports gamers seeking a competitive edge.

Number of Keys

104

Interface

USB Wired

Key Switch Type

Cherry MX Blue

Key Backlighting

RGB Per-Key

Media Controls

Dedicated

Passthrough Ports

None

Palm Rest

Detachable (Magnetic)

Learn More

Corsair K70 RGB Pro Review

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The Best RGB Keyboards for 2025
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Buying Guide: The Best RGB Keyboards for 2025

The ABCs of RGB in Keyboards

RGB keyboards—desktop-PC keyboards with multicolor lighting that’s customizable to various degrees—are on the leading edge of input-device innovation. And they command, in some cases, the very highest prices for their kind.

What’s RGB all about? When you overlap three beams of light—red, green, and blue, each numbered for intensity from 0 to 256—you get every combination of light that we humans can see. That forms a potential variety of 16.8 million colors. (Well, actually, it’s 16,777,216, meaning 256 times 256 times 256, but who’s counting?) This basic color technique is reflected in the lighting-software controls for RGB-capable PC keyboards meant for gamers, which often let you specify any combination of R, G, and B values to light up the keys…and your desk.

It’s important to distinguish these RGB models from “single-color” backlit keyboards or multicolor-backlit keyboards of a limited color range. Some premium PC keyboards feature a more limited form of backlighting—LEDs that shine through and around each key—in one color, typically white, red, blue, or green. Changeable RGB lighting added to a keyboard, though, is way more sophisticated, and reflected in the price.

Now, of course, RGB lighting is hardly an essential feature. But for some gamers, in some games, it has stark benefits, which we’ll get into below. And since the possible combinations of RGB colors are so broad on a keyboard with 100-plus keys, even when you’re not using the peripheral, you can sit back, turn on The Moody Blues’ “Nights in White Satin,” set the keyboard’s colors to cycle, and talk to Carl Sagan. (He’s been dead for decades, but that doesn’t matter.) But we digress.


The Basics: Why Do You Want RGB Backlighting?

Here’s the nutshell version of keyboard-backlighting evolution: First, you had keyboards with solid-color backlight options. Then came multiple-color backlight options, in which you could change whole zones of keys, or all of the keys, across a limited range of colors. Finally, RGB keyboards arrived.

MSI RGB keys

(Credit: Zackery Cuevas)

The “RGB” label is a very specific thing; keyboards that cycle through a limited array of colors are not the same. An RGB keyboard offers the full RGB spectrum of colors, allowing it to display subtle pinks, bright purples, dark reds, and every color in between. Essentially, you can choose any color from the RGB color wheel, and have it be the backlight for the entire keyboard, or just a key or two.

Another important distinction is the ability to program each key’s color individually, versus programming the whole board or key clusters. “Per-key RGB” is the ne plus ultra backlighting feature of keyboards in this market; be sure that’s what you’re getting if you are serious about your backlight programmability. (More on that in a bit.)

XPG Mage RGB keyboard

(Credit: Zackery Cuevas)

Since RGB backlighting is such a specific and premium feature (it’s costly for the manufacturer to implement), “RGB” will usually be in the name of the product, but not every company uses that specific phrase, so look closely while you shop. These keyboards are easy to spot on sight, though, as the promo photos usually show the keyboard displaying a rainbow of colors, as opposed to just one color.

Now, of course, keyboards like these look nice, but what can you do, practically speaking, with the RGB lighting on a keyboard? Depending on the board in question, you have some very interesting options. Let’s consider a few.

Highlight the Navigation Keys. Anyone who has gamed much on a PC knows the WASD keys as north-west-south-east directional keys, but how many of us whack the wrong key at the wrong time nonetheless? Or maybe there’s a game that has a different navigational system that you cannot change (or maybe you can change it but need help remembering the new key locations). Colorizing the four navigational keys differently from the rest of the board is handy for that. (Some gaming models come with differently textured WASD keycaps to help you feel them, too.)

Razer Huntsman RGB lights

(Credit: Zackery Cuevas)

Color Keys for Functions. It’s fantasy game time! You have five melee attacks, four spells, three helpful potion types, and two weapons to swap among. Now, it’s not impossible to keep all that straight if you can spend the time memorizing. Along the way, though, you’re going to make a lot of life-threatening mistakes. Things get a lot easier if you can define macro areas of your keyboard for each of these tasks, then color-code them uniquely.

Cooldown Notifications. Let’s say your game avatar has three active abilities that include “cooldown” periods, figured at 8, 13, and 23 seconds. You could just watch their bars on the screen to see when those powers regenerate. But it’s a lot easier to set three ability keys to blink at the timed interval after each ability has been activated. In the meantime, you keep your eyes where they should be: on the action. MOBA players, such as League of Legends fiends, stand to gain from this.

SteelSeries Keyboard with RGB Keys

(Credit: SteelSeries)

Efficiency in Building. This is a variant on our cooldown notifications, but for real-time-strategy (RTS) hounds. Say you start to work on a factory, but when it’s done being built, you have to manage its production to create mechas. Set a key to blink or change color/intensity when the factory’s ready, and without delay, you can place your order for that behemoth that’ll help you defend faux-Tokyo.

The RGB Kitchen Sink. For that matter, what about setting a row of lights that blinks red when you’re being borne down upon by a certain minimum number of enemies? Different lights blinking that signal the arrival of allies? A bank of lights for each online friend in an MMO quest that fades as his or her health diminishes? (Great for healers, this one.) One that signals when your warehouse is full, and you need to sell some of its contents? Or when your fuel gets low? Or…when you haven’t had a bathroom break in four hours?

This list could easily be much longer. Suffice it to say, while you won’t find much use for RGB lighting in games such as Stardew Valley or Cities: Skylines, it’s an entirely different matter for DOTA 2, or for players whose hands visibly twitch when they think of their next Fortnite match.

So, how to assess what makes for a quality RGB keyboard? Glad you asked…


What to Look for in an RGB Keyboard

Separately Lit (“Per-Key RGB”) Keys. We mentioned this earlier. It’s not enough alone to have RGB lighting if you’re a key-customizing hound. In a truly customizable RGB keyboard, each key must have its own, discrete RGB programmability. That’s not a given; some budget keyboards may provide multicolor backlighting, but not per-key backlighting. While RGB per-key is more common these days, check to be sure what you’re getting.

Lighting Controls for Groups of Keys. Now, just because each key is separately backlit, it doesn’t mean you want every key to be different from all the others, all the time. You may want to create a group of keys with a certain color to handle a particular in-game effect, and who wants to program this one key at a time when a board may have 100-plus keys? You want to be able to isolate a zone of keys and apply that color all at once.

A Lighting On/Off Toggle. In DOS days, we had something called a “boss key,” usually F3, that you’d whack when your manager was rounding the corner and you didn’t want to be caught digitally goofing off. This is something like that, a hardware control that sobers up your keyboard fast when the situation demands it.

RGB Effects That Tie Into Games. Never mind the advertising that states you can hit a key and send a bomb-like wave of color blossoming out. That’s nice to see, but if you plan to do more than just watch your keyboard, you’ll want to concentrate on RGB effects that help you play better. Look for specific game support in the software that lets you go deeper than simple key remapping.

XPG Mage full-size keyboard

(Credit: Zackery Cuevas)

All the Hues You Paid For. Make sure any so-called “RGB” keyboard you are considering actually can show 16.8 million colors. A more limited color palette can result in a phenomenon known as “stepping.” With a less-than-true-RGB keyboard, when the board executes color fades or blossoms, you may see a kind of jerkiness to the transitions, actions that aren’t smooth and draw attention to themselves. Be sure to check the specs.

Good Software. Here’s the double-edged sword of RGB illumination: You need sophisticated software to control all the glowing lights, sort of like running the console at a rave. A budget-priced colorized keyboard with only hardware controls governing the lighting won’t be a “true” RGB keyboard.

That said, most makers’ software has something akin to an “easy mode” with preset illumination patterns, such as a color wave, a color cycle, or a breathing effect. If you’re willing to dive deeper, per-key RGB keyboards also offer “freestyle” modes in which you can tweak the backlighting of individual keys, or groups of keys. Be sure to check out what the software offers before you make a purchase, because it will make a huge difference in your ownership experience. In our own testing, we’ve found Logitech’s and Razer’s software the easiest to use, with Corsair’s deeper in some respects and a bit more challenging.

Recommended by Our Editors

Razer Keyboard Software

(Credit: Razer)

How to judge? The utility’s screens must be easy to read, in a good-size font with strongly contrasting text and background. The application should be well-organized, with clear tabs or subsections, and you should get a robust, comprehensible in-product help system. It should provide simple ways to achieve the lighting effects you want, and a good macro editor that binds the effects to keys with conditionals that aid you in play. Research the possibilities and limitations of the keyboard’s software before you buy. Some companies offer their keyboard software manuals online. And of course, reviews, reviews, and more reviews: Read ’em.

Community-Created Lighting. Some RGB keyboard manufacturers, such as Logitech, offer pre-configured lighting effects for a series of games, but we’re also interested in being able to share profiles with friends or import those recommended to us for a specific game. Keep this in mind, then, when shopping for your RGB keyboard: Can you import profiles containing effects sets developed by others? Can you export your own?

Corsair’s RGB keyboards have a good community following. With Corsair’s RGB keyboards (and mice) you can run lighting patterns created by the community along with all the traditional options available in its software, Corsair Utility Engine (iCUE). This opens up a world of lighting options, an almost unlimited buffet of cool lighting tricks. Razer and its very active fanbase have also gotten into this kind of thing with its Chroma Workshop. (Chroma is Razer’s software that governs lighting in its compatible devices.)

Game Profiles. This is a no-brainer: Any gaming keyboard worthy of its name should support unlimited game-specific profiles, in which you can customize a host of controls specific to a program or game, including lighting settings. And each keyboard should have at least one, but hopefully two or three, onboard profiles. That means it stores the profile(s) in the keyboard’s internal memory, so you can take them with you. That’s handy when you’re engaging in tournament play that allows each contestant to bring only a keyboard, not a full computer.

Mouse Syncing. This feature allows the keyboard RGB illumination to be coordinated with your mouse, assuming your mouse is RGB-capable, too, and of the same make. If you’ve selected a “color wave,” for example, the wave can leave the right edge of your keyboard and continue on through your mouse! And if you have the keyboard and mouse synced, you can control the lighting for both at one time, as opposed to having to tweak each individually.

Media Controls. These are not specific to RGB keyboards, but insist on them, since you’ll be paying top dollar. Most top-shelf keyboards offer dedicated media controls now, as opposed to just pressing the Fn button and then, say, F9 for volume. Check out exactly how the media controls are set up, and whether the keyboard uses a knob, a button, or a wheel. We are huge fans of volume wheels on keyboards. (Corsair’s high-end RGB models have an awesome volume roller for this, and some keyboard makers have incorporated similar features.)

A USB Hub. Again, this isn’t a feature specific to RGB keyboards. An additional USB cable plugs into your PC alongside the main one for the keyboard data, powering a USB port that allows you to plug a USB device directly into the keyboard (usually at the back). We’ve used these ports to plug in a USB headset or mouse, or to plug in a USB flash drive to load or retrieve a few files.

Roccat keyboard RGB lights

(Credit: Zackery Cuevas)

All the Other Good Stuff (That You’d Expect From a Non-RGB Board). Don’t forget the more prosaic physical features. How adjustable is the keyboard height? Is the keyboard corded, or wireless? (Most RGB models are wired, because of the extra power demands.) If it’s a mechanical keyboard, what are your key-switch options, so it will give a good response to your touch? (See our guide to the best mechanical keyboards for more on that rather complex issue, as well as our guide to mechanical switches.) That’s where our deep-dive reviews come in, which should make it easier for you to locate just the RGB keyboard you need.


Smaller Keyboards: Tenkeyless, 60%, and More

Most mainstream and gaming models have a 10-key numeric pad, which most laptops lack and is a necessity for anyone who needs to tally numbers or enter data into a spreadsheet. So-called “tenkeyless” (TKL) models slice off the numeric pad in the interest of space savings and keeping your typing and mousing hands closer together. Bear that in mind if you’re looking at gaming keyboards, as TKL models are a relatively recent trend especially in that subclass. If you want to go even smaller, 60% and 65% keyboards eliminate even more keys. Check out our 60% keyboard guide for everything you need to know about the category.

Corsair leyboard custom space bar

(Credit: Zackery Cuevas)

For more of the highest-rated keyboards (not just RGB ones) that we have reviewed, also check out our roundup of the best keyboards overall. Also check out our picks for the best gaming PCs and best gaming mice.

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