Best early Black Friday gaming keyboard deals

The Asus ROG Strix Flare II Animate Gaming Keyboard on a desk.

Black Friday can always be relied upon to take the pain out of a new keyboard purchase. I’ve only been keeping track in a very general sense but it does feel like non-sale prices, especially on mechanical keyboards, have been creeping upwards. If you are in the market, you could find thefore, say, a list of the best early Black Friday gaming keyboard deals very useful indeed. Hey, here’s one.

We’re still a couple of weeks out from Black Friday itself, so there will likely be many more keyboard deals on the way, but even at this early stage there’s a nice mix of offers. Cheap membrane keyboards, fancy mechanical keyboards, full-sized models, compact tenkleyless (TKL) or 60% designs… they’re all here, and they’ll go much easier on your wallet than usual. Some you may even recognize from our best gaming keyboards rankings. You can check back later, though, as I’ll be adding any other worthy early deals I find in the coming days.

For a full set of thrifty new peripherals, you can also check our guide to the best early Black Friday gaming mouse deals. Or, to browse the full array of RPS-curated hardware offer, our main Black Friday PC deals hub covers everything from headsets to graphics cards.



The Asus ROG Strix Flare II Animate Gaming Keyboard on a desk.

Black Friday gaming keyboard deals


UK deals:


US deals:

HyperX Alloy Core RGB – $25 from Best Buy (was $50)

The Alloy Core isn’t nearly as penny-pinching as this price would suggest, with a full set of media keys, RGB lighting, and anti-ghosting. The membrane keys are spill-resistant as well.

Razer Cynosa V2 – $27 from Best Buy (was $60)

Like the Alloy Core RGB, this is an intensely affordable membrane keyboard with a strong feature set, including spill resistance and recordable macro support.

Logitech G213 Prodigy – $40 from Amazon US (was $70)

Despite having what Logitech call “mech-dome” switches, the G213 Prodigy feels more like a conventional membrane design. Nonetheless, its wealth of customizable keys and integrated palm wrest help elevate it above most of the rubber dome rabble.

HyperX Alloy Origins Core TKL – $53 from Best Buy (was $90)

Here we go, a real mechanical keyboard in the flexible (but still space-saving) TKL form factor. Best Buy has the tactile switch version on sale, so you’ll feel a little bump when you bottom out a keypress.

Razer Huntsman Elite – $95 from Best Buy (was $200)

Optical-mechanical keyboards rarely drop below $100, so this is a good chance to get the well-equipped Huntsman Elite in its clicky key configuration.

Logitech G915 Lightspeed Wireless TKL – $160 from Amazon US (was $230)

This isn’t the lowest price that the tenkeyless G915 has ever reached, although it’s still a fantastic wireless keyboard – with agile low-profile keys and ultra-stable connectivity – on a decent discount.

Corsair K70 RGB Pro – $162 from Best Buy (was $180)

A high-end keyboard to its core, the K70 RGB Pro looks and feels like luxury. I’m particularly fond of its Cherry MX Speed ​​Silver switches, which have a shorter travel distance than MX Reds for a faster action.



Reference-www.rockpapershotgun.com