{"url":"https://www.rtings.com/keyboard/reviews/keychron/k2-he","title":"Keychron K2 HE excels in wireless gaming performance","domain":"rtings.com","imageUrl":"https://images.pexels.com/photos/8176505/pexels-photo-8176505.jpeg?auto=compress&cs=tinysrgb&h=650&w=940","pexelsSearchTerm":"Keychron K2 keyboard","category":"Tech","language":"en","slug":"0f922f37","id":"0f922f37-e584-40e0-842b-8b9b3433d716","description":"RTings reviews the compact 75% Keychron K2 HE as a wireless Hall effect gaming keyboard with strong build and performance.","summary":"## TL;DR\n- RTings reviews the compact 75% Keychron K2 HE as a wireless Hall effect gaming keyboard with strong build and performance.\n- It delivers low latency via 1000Hz polling wired or 2.4GHz, customizable actuation like Rapid Trigger, and quiet typing with pre-lubed switches.\n- Best for gamers seeking budget wireless HE option, though switch wobble and tray mount limit softer typing feel.\n\n## The story at a glance\nRTings tested the Keychron K2 HE, a 75% wireless keyboard in Keychron's K HE series using Gateron Double-Rail Magnetic switches. The review praises its gaming prowess from low latency and software features alongside solid office typing. It comes amid rising Hall effect keyboards for competitive play, updated July 2025 with test bench refresh in January 2026.[[1]](https://www.rtings.com/keyboard/reviews/keychron/k2-he)\n\n## Key points\n- Excellent gaming with remarkably low single/multi-key latency, effective **1000Hz** polling rate on wired/2.4GHz (Bluetooth higher); adjustable actuation/reset points plus Rapid Trigger and One Key Multiple Command via web software.\n- Great build: ABS plastic chassis, aluminum frame, PBT keycaps (Cherry or OSA profile); hot-swappable but only for Gateron Double-Rail Magnetic switches.\n- Typing quality impressive: smooth pre-lubed switches, consistent stabilizers, multiple acoustic layers for extremely quiet rounded sound; minor switch wobble.\n- Wireless via Bluetooth 5.2 (3 devices) or 2.4GHz receiver; full RGB backlighting; N-key rollover; no media keys or wrist rest.\n- Pros include raw performance and customization; cons are tray mount stiffness, limited hot-swap, and tall profile hurting portability.\n- Compares well to pricier Q1 HE (stiffer but cheaper) or Lemokey P1 HE (similar performance, less premium); trails wired Wooting 80HE in polling rate.\n\n## Details and context\nThe K2 HE targets gamers and typists wanting Hall effect benefits like dynamic actuation without wires, unlike mechanical predecessors like Keychron K2 v2. Its tray mount gives firm feedback versus softer gasket designs in rivals, suiting precise inputs but not plush office use. Software enables profiles and onboard memory, though restricted to specific switches limits broad modding.\n\nNo battery life tests available; it's heavy for its compact size, better desk-bound than travel. Standard edition has shine-through legends; Special Edition does not. Review notes identical performance across K HE series variants (K4, K8 etc.) with layout differences.[[1]](https://www.rtings.com/keyboard/reviews/keychron/k2-he)\n\n## Why it matters\nHall effect keyboards expand options for low-latency wireless gaming, challenging wired premiums in esports. Gamers get customizable precision cheaply; typists gain quiet consistency without bulk. Watch Keychron software updates or rivals like Wooting for higher polling in wireless HE models.","hashtags":["#keyboards","#gaming","#hall-effect","#keychron","#wireless","#tech"],"sources":[{"url":"https://www.rtings.com/keyboard/reviews/keychron/k2-he","title":"Original article"}],"viewCount":2,"publishedAt":"2026-04-16T06:16:13.562Z","createdAt":"2026-04-16T06:16:13.562Z","articlePublishedAt":"2025-07-02T18:19:15.000Z"}