Compare Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro vs HyperX Alloy Rise

P1 Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
P2 HyperX Alloy Rise

Comparison Takeaways

Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro

Where It Has the Edge

  • wrist rest quality is 4.5 vs 2.0. Wrist rest quality was a consistent highlight on full-size reviews for plushness, comfort and RGB integration, with a...
  • ease of switch replacement is 5.0 vs 2.8. Switch replacement was excellent on hot-swap 75% variants, where reviewers found swapping solid or easy, but it was...
  • frame rigidity is 4.5 vs 3.1. Frame rigidity was praised where reviewers described the chassis and top plate as robust, solid, and free of...
  • extra gaming features is 4.3 vs 3.1. Extra gaming features were praised most by macro-heavy and Snap Tap users, with reviewers highlighting benefits for tinkerers,...

HyperX Alloy Rise

Where It Has the Edge

  • compatibility is 4.8 vs 2.0. Compatibility is positive where evaluated, with reviewers noting broad switch/keycap support and device versatility.
  • battery life is 4.7 vs 2.3. Battery life is a clear wireless-model strength, with reviewers reporting long runtime and being impressed by endurance.
  • legend visibility is 4.7 vs 2.6. Legend visibility is praised for dark-room use and clear readability, with one reviewer also liking the visible function...
  • size and form factor is 4.3 vs 2.5. Size and form factor are mostly positive, especially the compact 75% model, though full-size reviewers warn about reduced...
Average score
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.8
Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.0
acoustics
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.6

Reviewers varied by switch and model: some praised muted, clacky or lower-pitched sound, while others heard plasticky clicks, dinging, or a weaker stock sound.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.9

Acoustics are mixed but mostly positive: several reviews praise clean or dampened sound, while IGN and Windows Central hear sharper, metallic, or clacky notes.

actuation consistency
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.3

Actuation balance was described positively where reviewers noted accidental strokes were avoided and productivity work was not littered with misinputs.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.0

Actuation consistency is mixed: some reviews praise consistent, controlled keypresses, while TechRadar reports misinputs from the sensitive switches.

backlight brightness
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.0

Backlighting was generally viewed as focused and granular, with reviewers noticing improved brightness control and stronger LED presentation.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.5

Backlight brightness is praised for strong saturation and non-dim maximum brightness without becoming irritating.

battery life
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.3

Battery evidence was split by model and settings, ranging from good light-use results to severe drain when RGB, OLED or wireless polling were active.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.7

Battery life is a clear wireless-model strength, with reviewers reporting long runtime and being impressed by endurance.

build quality
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.4

Build quality was broadly praised on the full-size model for solidity and premium feel, though one 75% Pro reviewer criticized the case quality for the price.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.5

Build quality is generally strong, with reviewers calling the keyboard solid, sturdy, high-grade, or robust despite some concerns around magnetic pieces.

cable quality
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.8

Cabling drew mixed reactions: braided or detachable hardware felt solid, but two cables, non-coiled cabling, and a chunky dongle hurt desk neatness.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
2.0

Cable quality is criticized by Noisy Pixel, which found the USB cable and mounting area poorly integrated into the keyboard's design.

compatibility
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.0

Compatibility evidence was limited but negative where Mac support was described as lacking for the keyboard.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.8

Compatibility is positive where evaluated, with reviewers noting broad switch/keycap support and device versatility.

connectivity
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.9

Connectivity was a recurring tradeoff: wired operation helped latency and passthrough, but reviewers missed wireless or noted cable-dependent clutter.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.1

Connectivity is strong on wireless models thanks to tri-mode and multi-device support, while wired-only versions are treated as a limitation.

customization options
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.5

Customization was one of the strongest themes, especially around remapping, the Command Dial, Chroma, and multi-layer programmability, with some Synapse limits.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.2

Customization options are a core strength, with broad praise for plates, badges, switches, RGB, and profiles, though some reviewers felt the ecosystem was premature or overpriced.

design aesthetics
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.3

Design reactions were mostly positive for premium, high-end styling and RGB-heavy looks, though one reviewer found the shine-through gamer look tacky.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.0

Design aesthetics are subjective: several reviewers like the clean, understated look, while others find the stock design plain or unremarkable.

desk space efficiency
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.6

Desk-space efficiency was weak on the full-size board because its macro column and wrist rest make it huge, while the 75% variants earned better space praise.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.2

Desk space efficiency is strongest on the 75% model, which reviewers say saves space while retaining important keys and improving wrist placement.

durability
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.3

Durability evidence centered on a sturdy frame and repair/mod potential, offset by one reviewer’s concern about keycap wear from a prior BlackWidow generation.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.7

Durability is supported by PBT wear resistance, long-lasting keycaps, and reviewers' sense that the keyboard is built to last.

ease of switch replacement
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
5.0

Switch replacement was excellent on hot-swap 75% variants, where reviewers found swapping solid or easy, but it was not a strength of the full-size board.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
2.8

Ease of switch replacement is mixed: Tom's Hardware finds the keyboard easy to customize, while Noisy Pixel reports stiff, challenging switch removal.

ergonomics
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.9

Ergonomics were mixed: wrist comfort and long-use ergonomics could be excellent, but side buttons and the extra left column caused accidental presses or reach issues.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.8

Ergonomics are mixed: compact models are praised for reach and wrist placement, while full-size or tall versions drew complaints about discomfort.

extra gaming features
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.3

Extra gaming features were praised most by macro-heavy and Snap Tap users, with reviewers highlighting benefits for tinkerers, strafing, and command-heavy games.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.1

Extra gaming features are mixed: anti-ghosting and game mode are useful, but some reviewers say the board lacks truly gamer-specific enhancements or sensitive actuation options.

frame rigidity
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.5

Frame rigidity was praised where reviewers described the chassis and top plate as robust, solid, and free of noticeable creaking.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.1

Frame rigidity is mixed: reviewers praise flex-free construction, but several criticize the magnetic top plate for looseness or easy removal.

gaming performance
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.8

Gaming performance was consistently strong, with reviewers reporting smooth play, no stutter or delay, top-tier responsiveness, and macro advantages in games.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.2

Gaming performance is broadly solid to excellent, with reviewers finding it competitive and responsive, though Noisy Pixel felt it lacked distinct gamer-focused behavior.

hot-swappable switches
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.6

Hot-swap support depended on variant: 75% boards were praised for easy switch changes, while full-size models were criticized for locking users into one switch choice.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.5

Hot-swappable switches are consistently positive, giving users functional flexibility and easy future upgrades without soldering.

keycap quality
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.7

Keycap quality was mixed: texture, shine-through and feel earned praise, but ABS material, PBT comparisons, sound, and wear concerns lowered confidence.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.6

Keycap quality is consistently strong, with praise for thick or textured PBT, grip, clean aesthetics, and long-wearing materials.

key responsiveness
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.7

Key responsiveness was a major strength, with reviewers citing instant, smooth, accurate, and sensitive keypresses across gaming and productivity.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.2

Responsiveness is a major strength, with multiple reviewers calling inputs instant or highly responsive; a few noted deep actuation or misfires depending on switch sensitivity.

key spacing
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.3

Key spacing evidence was positive, with reviewers saying the spacing reduced errors and let them play without looking down.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.1

Key spacing is mostly positive, with one reviewer calling it perfect, though TechRadar disliked the subtle F/J bumps.

key stability
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
5.0

Key stability evidence was positive but limited, with one reviewer praising the switches for practically zero wobble.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.6

Key stability is praised where discussed, with reviewers noting stable switches and keys that stay in place even after customization.

latency
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.7

Latency was praised on the wired full-size board, especially alongside high polling, where reviewers reported zero lag, smoothness, and low-latency gaming.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.6

Latency is usually praised as essentially unnoticeable or extremely low, though Dexerto notes it cannot match faster hall-effect gaming boards.

layout options
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.5

Layout evidence favored the 75% layout as a useful, welcome middle ground while the full-size layout drew space and adjustment complaints.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.8

Layout options are mixed: reviewers value the 75% balance and full-size choice, but some dislike missing or remapped keys.

legend visibility
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.6

Legend visibility was mixed: keycap shine-through could be clean and even, but media-key legends were criticized as hard to read or unlit.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.7

Legend visibility is praised for dark-room use and clear readability, with one reviewer also liking the visible function legends.

macro customization
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.6

Macro customization was one of the best-supported positives, with reviewers praising the eight macros, creative freedom, productivity shortcuts, and game advantages.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.3

Macro customization is useful and appreciated, with reviewers noting key remaps, macro setup, and enough flexibility for game profiles.

materials quality
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.8

Materials quality was praised through aluminum, premium finishes, and strong material choices across several full-size reviews.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.6

Materials quality is positive where evaluated, especially for the aluminum top plate and sturdy, flex-free frame construction.

media controls
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.3

Media controls were mostly liked for convenience and productivity, though some reviewers disliked the awkward height or difficult-to-see legends.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.0

Media controls are mixed: reviewers often praise tactile dedicated buttons, but Tom's Hardware finds onboard controls limited and TechRadar finds the buttons cheap.

noise level
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.2

Noise level varied heavily by switch: Green switches were often loud, while Yellow or damped variants were quieter or satisfying rather than distracting.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.9

Noise level is context-dependent: some reviewers call it quieter than peers, while IGN found it louder than a typical linear mechanical board.

onboard memory
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.0

Onboard memory was useful for profiles but limited by Synapse dependency, especially where custom dial modes did not carry over.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.7

Onboard memory is praised where discussed because settings or configurations can be saved directly to the keyboard.

passthrough features
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.2

Passthrough was viewed as useful but limited, especially by USB 2.0 speeds, voltage constraints, and the need for a second cable.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
No score yet
per-key lighting control
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
No score yet
Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.4

Per-key lighting control is generally well received, with reviewers noting individual key assignment and easier multi-key selection workflows.

polling rate
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.5

Polling rate impressed some reviewers with speed or snappiness, while others considered 8,000Hz niche or hard to notice on a keyboard.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.8

The 8,000Hz polling rate is recognized as high-end, but reviewers are split on practical benefit because some found the returns negligible.

portability
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.0

Portability was variant-dependent: the 75% board was bag-friendly, while the full-size board was problematic for transport and mouse space.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
2.3

Portability is a weakness because the magnetic top cover can come off when lifting or require a special grip.

profile management
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.0

Profile management was useful for switching setups and game-linked profiles, though some functions still depended on Synapse or required manual management.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.9

Profile management is mixed: onboard/profile switching is praised, but Tom's Hardware and How-To Geek found profile or lighting control limitations.

reliability
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.6

Reliability concerns included one LED hiccup, app binding failures, an OLED darkening issue, and reported orange-switch problems on one 75% Pro review.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.2

Reliability is mixed: some reviews describe consistent, reliable operation, while Windows Central reports intermittent inconsistency.

RGB customization
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.3

RGB customization was a consistent Razer strength, with reviewers praising complex-to-simple controls, Chroma syncing, and game-reactive lighting.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.5

RGB customization is a strength, with reviewers liking layered effects, presets, per-user patterns, and broad software control.

RGB lighting quality
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.6

RGB lighting quality was heavily praised for brightness, underglow, flawless implementation, and desk-filling visual impact, with minor visibility caveats.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.4

RGB lighting quality is often praised as bright, vibrant, sharp, or evenly distributed, but Windows Central reported occasional lighting shutoffs.

size and form factor
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.5

Size and form factor were a frequent concern on the full-size version, which reviewers called very large, while compact variants helped portability.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.3

Size and form factor are mostly positive, especially the compact 75% model, though full-size reviewers warn about reduced mouse space.

software quality
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.4

Software quality was polarizing: Synapse could be intuitive and reliable, but reviewers often disliked needing it open for advanced functions.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.4

Software quality is divisive: some reviewers find NGENUITY easy or even great, while many call it basic, limited, buggy, or frustrating.

sound dampening
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.6

Sound dampening was generally effective, with reviewers crediting foam, tape mods, and damping for reduced ping, reverb, and a more refined sound.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.5

Sound dampening is widely praised, with reviewers crediting foam, gaskets, or integrated dampening for reduced harshness and better sound.

stabilizer quality
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.6

Stabilizer quality ranged from peaceful and low-rattle to merely acceptable or needing work, especially on some 75% and Yellow-switch units.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.5

Stabilizer quality is praised in the detailed reviews, especially for reduced rattle, stability, and factory lubrication.

switch feel
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.5

Switch feel was broadly strong, with praise for Yellow, Green, and Orange variants, though some reviewers wanted more checkout options or different stock switches.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.4

Reviewers generally liked the HyperX switches for their smooth, satisfying, responsive feel, though IGN and TechRadar found them harsher or too sensitive for some users.

switch options
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
2.5

Switch options were a recurring weakness where reviewers wanted tactile, linear, or more checkout choices, especially on expensive or Pro models.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.1

Switch choice is positive but limited: reviewers appreciated linear/tactile options and replaceable kits, with most praise tied to the ability to tune feel.

typing comfort
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.2

Typing comfort was generally strong when switches and wrist rest suited the reviewer, though one Green-switch reviewer wanted more cushioning for long writing.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.0

Typing comfort is usually strong thanks to softness and reduced fatigue, but some reviewers found the board harsh or palm pressure problematic.

typing feel
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.7

Typing feel was one of the clearest positives, with several reviewers calling the board satisfying, fast, or fantastic to type on.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.5

Typing feel is one of the strongest themes, ranging from outstanding and premium to smooth and satisfying, though IGN found the keystroke harsher than rivals.

value for money
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.5

Value was divided: many full-size reviewers felt the $230 price was justified by features, while 75% Pro reviewers objected strongly to $300 pricing.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
3.2

Value for money is the biggest split: reviewers like the keyboard more on sale, but many criticize full MSRP against strong alternatives.

volume control
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.9

Volume control was usually convenient and tactile, though some reviewers wanted a press-to-mute wheel or found dial-based volume less convenient.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.1

Volume control is generally good, with praise for tactile or notched feel, though Noisy Pixel wanted smoother rotation.

wireless performance
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
3.4

Wireless performance evidence came from 75% Pro reviews and was mixed: wireless controls and performance were useful, but battery tradeoffs reduced appeal.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
4.2

Wireless performance is mostly strong, with praise for low latency and no input delay, but Windows Central experienced occasional disconnects.

wrist rest quality
Product 1: Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
4.5

Wrist rest quality was a consistent highlight on full-size reviews for plushness, comfort and RGB integration, with a few fit or height complaints.

Product 2: HyperX Alloy Rise
2.0

Wrist rest quality is effectively a weakness because multiple reviewers specifically wished one was included or needed for comfort.