Fifty years of keyboard design, and the basic contract never changed: switches under keycaps, keycaps under fingers, fingers making typos. The mechanical keyboard revival of the 2010s gave us better switches, heavier brass plates, and an entire hobbyist economy built around sound profiles and spring weights, but the object itself remained stubbornly analog in its ambitions. What’s shifted in 2025 and 2026 is the ambition. Boutique builders and hardware engineers are converging on a new idea: the keyboard as a control surface, a designed object with its own interface, its own visual language, its own intelligence. MelGeek, a Beijing-based custom keyboard brand with a decade of crowdfunded hardware behind it, just made that idea concrete with the Centauri80.
The Centauri80 is an 80% Hall Effect keyboard with a 1.78-inch OLED touchscreen embedded directly into the board, running at 325 PPI, which is the same pixel density as an Apple Watch face. A physical rotary encoder called the Super Dock sits beside it, letting you swap live wallpapers, toggle macros, and dial in lighting without alt-tabbing out of whatever you’re working in. Under the aluminum unibody, a distributed architecture of six microcontroller chips drives TTC Flip King magnetic switches to a 0.125ms latency at an 8000Hz polling rate. The whole thing retails at $299 from MelGeek’s own store, which puts it in a genuinely interesting position against the Wooting 60HE and the rest of the Hall Effect field.
Designer: MelGeek

MelGeek opted for a suspended aluminum alloy unibody, which means the internal structure floats within the outer frame rather than bolting directly to it, reducing vibration transfer and keeping the sound profile controlled and intentional. The five-layer gasket-mounted acoustic structure underneath reinforces that choice: every keystroke travels through dampening foam, a silicone layer, and a carefully tuned plate before it reaches your ears as that deep, focused thud that keyboard people spend years and hundreds of dollars chasing. The design language draws openly from cyberpunk aesthetics, with MelGeek describing the Centauri80 internally as “a reimagined starship,” which sounds like marketing until you see the raking lines and deconstructed geometry and realize they actually earn that description. Transparent keycaps ship as default, showing the per-key RGB illumination through the caps themselves rather than just around them, and the three-sided 16 million color lighting system wraps the board in a glow that reads more like a designed accent than a gaming peripheral throwing up on itself.


Traditional mechanical switches use metal contacts: two pieces of metal touch, the circuit closes, the keystroke registers. The problem is that metal contacts wear down, develop inconsistency over time, and can only register a keypress at one fixed point in the key’s travel. Hall Effect switches replace those metal contacts with magnets and sensors, reading the magnet’s position continuously as the key moves, which means the board can register a keypress at any point in the travel down to 0.1mm. That’s what rapid trigger means in practice: the keyboard resets and re-registers with every tiny movement rather than waiting for the key to physically return to a set reset point. For competitive gaming, where re-pressing a movement key a fraction of a second faster translates to a measurable advantage, this is the difference between winning and watching a killcam. MelGeek’s third-generation magnetic switch system adds a distributed architecture of one master chip and five processing chips, delivering what the company claims is 150% faster response than its previous generation, with an EMI shield engineered to cut cross-key interference by 60%.

Embedded into the upper right corner of the 80% layout, the 1.78-inch OLED runs at 325 PPI and 60Hz, handled entirely through the Super Dock rotary encoder beside it. Rotate to cycle through settings pages, press to confirm, keep typing. Live wallpapers, macro profiles, per-key lighting configurations, polling rate adjustments, all accessible on the keyboard itself without opening MelGeek’s Hive software. For someone running multiple macro profiles across different applications, having that switching surface physically on the board rather than buried in a system tray is a real quality-of-life improvement. For someone who sets their keyboard up once and forgets about it, the screen will display a wallpaper and nothing else, which is still a spectacular piece of hardware to stare at while pretending to work.


The Wooting 60HE, which more or less popularized Hall Effect keyboards for a mainstream gaming audience, sits at around $175 and offers rapid trigger without any display hardware. The Centauri80’s $299 asks for a $124 premium, and what you’re buying with that gap is the OLED screen, the rotary encoder, the unibody aluminum chassis, and the aesthetic ambition. The keyboard sits alongside the Wooting the way a beautifully machined mechanical watch sits alongside a Casio: both tell time accurately, one of them is also a statement about what objects are allowed to be. MelGeek has spent a decade building its reputation through crowdfunded custom boards and a community of gamers, coders, and creators who treat keyboards the way audiophiles treat headphones, and the Centauri80 is the clearest articulation yet of what that philosophy looks like at flagship scale.
