Compare SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3 vs Keychron K2 HE

P1 SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
P2 Keychron K2 HE

Comparison Takeaways

SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3

Where It Has the Edge

  • per-key lighting control is 4.3 vs 2.0. Per-key lighting control was useful and flexible, but some custom profiles required GG running in the background.
  • reliability is 4.7 vs 3.3. Reliability was supported by accurate input registration and no missed rapid presses in some reviews, but wireless reliability...
  • layout options is 4.5 vs 3.2. Layout options were appreciated in the review that noted full-size, tenkeyless, and wireless variants.
  • cable quality is 4.5 vs 3.3. Cable quality was praised when reviewers mentioned the braided, detachable USB-C cable as welcome or less intrusive.

Keychron K2 HE

Where It Has the Edge

  • analog input support is 4.2 vs 2.2. Analog-style depth input was viewed as a useful advanced feature, especially for gamepad-like controls, though one reviewer saw...
  • onboard memory is 5.0 vs 3.2. Onboard memory was praised because mappings or settings stayed on the keyboard and transferred across devices.
  • battery life is 4.4 vs 3.4. Battery life was generally positive, ranging from several days to multiple weeks depending on RGB and wireless settings,...
  • ease of switch replacement is 3.8 vs 2.9. Switch replacement was possible, but the practical experience was constrained by limited compatible magnetic switch choices.
Average score
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.0
Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.2
acoustics
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.0

Acoustics were mixed-positive: many liked the thocky or improved sound, while others heard hollow, clacky, or less refined notes.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.7

Reviewers frequently liked the K2 HE's deeper, thocky, or satisfying sound, though one called it unadventurous rather than exciting.

actuation consistency
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.8

Actuation was often praised as consistent and precise, but a few tests found software settings did not perfectly match physical results.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.7

The Hall effect switches were repeatedly described as smooth and consistent, with only mild stiffness noted in one review.

analog input support
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
2.2

Analog-style control was a weak point in the TechRadar review, which wanted more gamepad-like analog mapping options.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.2

Analog-style depth input was viewed as a useful advanced feature, especially for gamepad-like controls, though one reviewer saw it as more novel than essential.

backlight brightness
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
2.5

Brightness was a recurring caveat, with reviewers saying the lighting was dimmer than desired or less bright than nearby accessories.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
2.7

Backlight brightness split reviewers: some found it dim or redundant on opaque caps, while others praised brighter implementations.

battery life
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.4

Battery life was acceptable but not standout: reviewers reported several days or about two heavy days, while IGN called it not the greatest.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.4

Battery life was generally positive, ranging from several days to multiple weeks depending on RGB and wireless settings, with a few average assessments.

build quality
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.7

Build quality was widely praised as sturdy, robust, premium, and tank-like despite some plastic construction caveats.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.9

Build quality was a consistent strength, with reviewers calling it solid, premium, rigid, and well made across editions.

cable quality
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.5

Cable quality was praised when reviewers mentioned the braided, detachable USB-C cable as welcome or less intrusive.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.3

Cable impressions were mixed: the braided cable was praised, but several reviewers disliked the short length or side-port constraints.

compatibility
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
No score yet
Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.8

Compatibility was praised for Mac/Windows switching, Linux mentions, and cross-device use, with no major platform problem in scored evidence.

connectivity
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.0

Connectivity ranged from smooth setup and simple wired use to serious wireless/dongle complaints in one PCMag review.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.5

Connectivity was generally strong across Bluetooth, 2.4GHz, and wired use, though side-port design and occasional wake behavior created caveats.

customization options
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.5

Customization was a major strength, with reviewers praising granular actuation, bindings, RGB, and profiles despite occasional complexity.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.8

Customization was one of the strongest themes, with reviewers praising per-key actuation, remapping, lighting, macros, and Hall effect controls.

design aesthetics
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.3

Design aesthetics were mostly positive for clean, minimal, premium looks, though one reviewer found the design nondescript.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.8

Design aesthetics earned broad praise for wood accents, a premium office-friendly look, and a less-gamer visual identity.

desk space efficiency
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.7

Desk-space efficiency was polarizing: full-size models consumed space, while Mini and TKL versions freed up room.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.6

The 75% layout was praised for saving desk space while retaining essentials, though some users missed larger layouts.

durability
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.8

One review specifically praised durability, saying the board could withstand intense gaming and bumps.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.8

Durability was inferred positively from sturdy construction, Hall effect longevity, and even an accidental drop test, with no major durability complaint.

ease of switch replacement
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
2.9

Switch replacement sentiment was split: keycap swapping was easy, but non-swappable or hard-to-repair switch designs frustrated reviewers.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.8

Switch replacement was possible, but the practical experience was constrained by limited compatible magnetic switch choices.

ergonomics
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.8

Ergonomics were strong for typing reach and long sessions, but some media-control placement and wrist positioning drew complaints.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.3

Ergonomics were mixed: adjustable angles helped some reviewers, but keyboard height caused wrist strain for others.

extra gaming features
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.6

Extra gaming features such as Protection Mode, Rapid Tap, dual actuation, and OLED controls were often praised as genuinely useful.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.8

Advanced gaming features were praised as serious tools for competitive players, especially actuation tuning and rapid-trigger behaviors.

frame rigidity
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.2

The Mini review found the board difficult to flex or bend, supporting strong frame rigidity for that version.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.8

Frame rigidity was praised in the reviews that discussed it, including no deck flex, rigid construction, and ultra-stable typing.

gaming performance
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.6

Gaming performance was strongly praised across written and video reviews, especially for shooters, fast-paced games, and esports features.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.7

Gaming performance was broadly positive, especially for responsiveness, rapid trigger, strafing, and clean repeated inputs, though pure esports comparisons were more guarded.

hot-swappable switches
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
2.9

Hot-swap evidence was mixed by model and reviewer, ranging from no hot-swap support to Hall-effect switch swapping on TKL/Mini units.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
2.6

Hot-swap support was consistently treated as limited because the board only accepts compatible Hall effect double-rail switches.

keycap quality
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.4

Keycaps were generally praised for PBT texture, grip, visibility, or shape, with some caveats around non-premium caps on the Mini.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.3

Keycap quality was mostly praised for PBT, OSA shape, and comfort, though a few reviews noted plain styling or material-saving concerns.

key responsiveness
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.9

Responsiveness was one of the strongest themes, with multiple reviewers saying inputs felt immediate and kept up with fast keystrokes.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.7

Key responsiveness was a major strength, with reviewers repeatedly calling the board fast, highly responsive, or effortless to trigger.

key spacing
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.5

One reviewer found the key reach comfortable, with nothing too far to stretch.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.4

Key spacing was mixed, with smaller or tightly packed keys bothering some reviewers before they adjusted.

key stability
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.0

One review found individual key wobble small enough on the dual-rail Hall-effect switches, supporting generally stable key travel.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.9

Key stability was repeatedly praised, with reviewers noting little or no wobble from double-rail switches and stabilized larger keys.

latency
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.1

Latency evidence was mostly positive in wired use, but Bluetooth and some measured results kept it from being flawless.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.0

Latency evidence was mixed: several reviewers saw no noticeable lag, while one measured/characterized performance as not top-tier gaming latency.

layout options
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.5

Layout options were appreciated in the review that noted full-size, tenkeyless, and wireless variants.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.2

Layout options were mixed: the 75% layout kept useful keys, but missing numpad, print screen, or full-size spacing bothered some users.

legend visibility
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.8

Legend visibility was mixed: the white TKL was praised for readable legends, while Mini front legends were criticized for not shining through.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.5

Legend visibility depended on version: opaque Special Edition caps drew criticism, while font clarity and shine-through options were praised elsewhere.

macro customization
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.6

Macro customization was viewed positively, with reviewers noting easy setup and access through software or onboard controls.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.7

Macro customization was praised where discussed, especially because macros could be created in Launcher and retained across devices.

materials quality
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.2

Materials were mostly praised for aluminum, matte finishes, and sturdy construction, but the Mini plastic-only case felt less premium.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.7

Materials quality came through in praise for aluminum, wood, concrete, PBT, and overall premium-feeling construction.

media controls
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.2

Media controls were mixed: OLED and volume controls were useful, but small wheels, cumbersome processes, and missing buttons drew complaints.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
2.9

Media controls were a recurring weakness because reviewers wanted a knob or dedicated controls, despite remapping and function-row workarounds.

noise level
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.2

Noise level was usually considered reasonable, with reviewers saying it was quieter than before or not distracting.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.2

Noise level was generally acceptable to good, with reviewers describing it as quiet enough or not overly clicky, though not silent.

onboard memory
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.2

Onboard memory was useful for profiles and cross-PC settings, but lighting behavior and profile requirements limited the experience.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
5.0

Onboard memory was praised because mappings or settings stayed on the keyboard and transferred across devices.

passthrough features
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
2.0

Passthrough was a clear weakness where reviewers missed USB passthrough or noted its absence alongside wired limitations.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
No score yet
per-key lighting control
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.3

Per-key lighting control was useful and flexible, but some custom profiles required GG running in the background.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
2.0

Per-key lighting control was specifically criticized in one review for not supporting individual key color selection.

polling rate
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.7

Reviewers considered the 1000 Hz polling rate usable and solid, while noting it trails newer 8000 Hz rivals.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.3

Polling rate was considered adequate to good for most users at 1,000Hz, but not class-leading for top competitive gaming.

portability
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.9

Portability varied by model: Mini and TKL versions were easy to move, while the full-size wired model was desk-bound.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.0

Portability was a weak-to-mixed area because weight and size made the board less travel-friendly despite compact dimensions.

profile management
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.3

Profile management was useful through QuickSet, presets, and OLED controls, but five always-loaded profiles and clunky menus created friction.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.6

Profile management was positive, with reviewers valuing locally stored profiles and separate typing/gaming setups.

rapid trigger support
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.6

Rapid Trigger/Rapid Tap features were repeatedly praised for faster resets, movement, and competitive control.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.9

Rapid trigger support was one of the clearest strengths, repeatedly praised for instant reset, gaming movement, and fast repeat inputs.

reliability
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.7

Reliability was supported by accurate input registration and no missed rapid presses in some reviews, but wireless reliability was not perfect.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.3

Reliability was mixed: some reviewers reported no issues or a reliable experience, while others noted wake or 2.4GHz input issues.

RGB customization
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.4

RGB customization was a clear strength, with per-key control and many effects praised, though some reviewers found setup less straightforward.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.6

RGB customization was praised for plentiful modes and settings, even when lighting visibility itself was not always ideal.

RGB lighting quality
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.2

RGB lighting quality was often praised for even, attractive, non-intrusive lighting, but color accuracy and brightness were not universally strong.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.9

RGB lighting quality ranged from bright and attractive to partially blocked by opaque caps, making it version-dependent.

size and form factor
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.7

Form factor sentiment depended on model: TKL and Mini layouts saved space, while compactness could require adjustment.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.7

The size and form factor were generally viewed as a good 75% balance, but the compact layout and weight were not ideal for every user.

software quality
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.9

Software quality was mixed: GG offered deep, useful tools, but several reviewers called it cluttered, bloated, or inconsistent.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.4

Software quality was mostly praised for a web-based Launcher that avoids bulky apps, though some reviewers found it less polished than competitors or dependent on USB/web access.

sound dampening
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.1

Sound dampening was generally seen as improved and effective, though one video reviewer still found the sound less refined than expected.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.8

Sound dampening was praised for muted, premium, thocky sound from internal foam, silicone, and dampening layers.

stabilizer quality
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.3

Stabilizers were mixed: some reviewers praised reduced wobble or no rattling, while others reported rattly or inconsistent larger keys.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.2

Stabilizer quality was mostly good, with several reviewers noting limited rattle or firm larger keys, but some still heard inconsistency.

switch feel
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.5

Reviewers mostly liked the OmniPoint switches for smooth, linear, fast feel, though one found them too light and preferred another board.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.9

Switch feel was the standout attribute: reviewers repeatedly described the magnetic switches as smooth, stable, satisfying, and highly responsive.

switch options
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
2.5

Switch choice drew mixed reactions: reviewers praised the Hall-effect base but criticized limited hardware versatility and mixed switch types on some keys.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
2.5

Switch options were the most consistent limitation because compatibility is restricted to a small set of linear Gateron double-rail magnetic switches.

typing comfort
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.4

Typing comfort was often excellent for long writing sessions, but TechRadar disliked the taller keycap typing experience.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.3

Typing comfort was usually positive thanks to smooth switches and low fatigue, but height caused discomfort for some reviewers.

typing feel
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.3

Typing feel was usually praised as smooth, satisfying, and enjoyable, though Mini and one video review found it less impressive.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.8

Typing feel was overwhelmingly praised, often described as cloud-like, fluid, smooth, or among the best experiences reviewers had used.

value for money
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.8

Value was the most divided category: many reviewers justified the cost, while others found the premium price hard to defend.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
4.6

Value for money was broadly positive because reviewers saw premium Hall effect features and design at a reasonable price, even if not cheap.

volume control
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.7

Volume control was generally useful, but the small or recessed wheel hurt ergonomics on some models.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
2.7

Volume control was criticized mainly through the missing knob and reliance on remapping or function-row controls.

wireless performance
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
3.5

Wireless performance was mixed, with one reviewer reporting dongle issues while others found wireless latency or claimed battery behavior acceptable.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
3.9

Wireless performance was mixed: many reviewers had flawless Bluetooth/2.4GHz use, while others saw wake delay or 2.4GHz bugginess.

wrist rest quality
Product 1: SteelSeries Apex Pro Gen 3
4.3

The wrist rest was usually praised for comfort, angle, magnetic attachment, and materials, though a few reviewers found it hard or awkward.

Product 2: Keychron K2 HE
5.0

Wrist rest quality was praised when reviewers tried Keychron's optional palm rest, though the need for one also reflected keyboard height.