Average score
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.4
Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2
acoustics
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

Reviewers generally liked the board's sound, describing it as pleasant, muted, clean, silent, or impressive, though one review found the stock sound somewhat pingy and hollow.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.7

Across reviews, the Air75 V3 is described as cleaner, less hollow, and more refined than earlier low-profile boards, with notably pleasing stock sound.

actuation consistency
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

Magnetic/TMR actuation was mostly described as predictable and controlled, with little accidental input in normal use; one reviewer only triggered accidental clicks at very sensitive test settings.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
No score yet
backlight brightness
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.0

Lighting brightness was praised in some variants for strong vibrancy and diffusion, but one TMR review called the lighting not very bright and a weak point.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
3.6

Brightness can be adjusted in software or shortcuts, but at least one review reports that brightness looks uneven across rows.

battery life
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.7

Battery feedback was consistently strong, with reviewers citing 8,000 mAh capacity, long wireless use, and claims or experiences ranging from many hours to weeks between charges.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.5

Battery life is one of the product’s strongest themes, with very high claims and mostly positive real-world impressions, even if one reviewer measured less than the headline figure.

build quality
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.7

The reviews repeatedly describe the keyboard as premium, heavy, aluminum, solid, and well built, with only minor concerns about a loose-feeling shell or rapid-disassembly sensitivity in some units.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Build quality is consistently praised, with the aluminum-top and ABS-bottom construction feeling solid and premium in use.

cable quality
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
3.6

Cable feedback was mixed: some reviews mention a spiral/coiled or nice-feeling USB cable, while others note non-braided, non-coiled, thick-fit, or not very durable cable issues.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.0

Only one review comments directly on the included cable, calling it decent overall but not especially premium.

compatibility
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.7

Compatibility is broad across devices, layouts, platforms, and switch types, including multi-device Bluetooth, Windows/Mac/Linux software access, and mechanical or magnetic switch support in TMR-focused reviews.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.7

Compatibility is a standout strength, especially for Mac users, while Windows and even iPad use are also described positively.

connectivity
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.6

Connectivity is a clear strength, with repeated support for USB-C, 2.4 GHz wireless, and Bluetooth, although Bluetooth polling and some wake or dongle details vary by review.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Tri-mode connectivity is widely praised for being flexible and easy to manage, with clear switches and convenient dongle storage.

customization options
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.7

Customization is one of the strongest themes: reviewers cite included accessories, VIA/web software, rapid disassembly, switch/keycap changes, lighting, remapping, and internal modding access.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Customization is broad, spanning remaps, knob actions, layers, lighting, and app-specific functions, which gives the board flexibility beyond stock use.

desk space efficiency
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.2

The compact 75% layout gives the board a smaller footprint than full-size designs, while the heavy chassis keeps it stationary rather than easy to move around.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.5

Its compact footprint is repeatedly framed as a strength for crowded desks, workstation setups, and mobile use.

durability
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

Durability evidence centers on the aluminum case, PBT keycaps, built-to-last comments, and the ability to open, clean, maintain, and replace parts over time.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Durability impressions are favorable thanks to wear-resistant PBT caps, engraved labels, and generally robust construction.

ease of switch replacement
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.7

Reviewers found the board easy to open or modify, especially because of the ball-catch/rapid-disassembly design, with several reviews highlighting fast access compared with screw-heavy boards.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.5

At least one review explicitly notes that switch changes are easy and do not require soldering, making experimentation accessible.

ergonomics
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
3.6

Ergonomics are mixed: reviewers liked the slanted or comfortable typing feel, but several disliked hidden mode switches, fixed typing angles, no adjustable feet, and occasionally awkward layout or cable access.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

Low-profile geometry, sculpted caps, and practical feet contribute to a more comfortable and fatigue-friendly experience than many bulkier keyboards.

extra gaming features
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.8

Gaming extras are extensive in the TMR/HE reviews, including Rapid Trigger, SOCD or snap key, DKS, mod-tap, toggle keys, and other advanced magnetic-keyboard features.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

The board includes extra gaming-oriented functions such as SOCD-style features, but reviews still treat them as bonuses rather than the core reason to buy it.

frame rigidity
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.4

The aluminum frame is generally described as stable, heavy, tank-like, or desk-planted, though a few reviews note loose shell feel, uneven flex, or case-opening sensitivity.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.5

The chassis is described as sturdy with minimal flex, giving the board a firmer and more confident feel than its slim profile suggests.

gaming performance
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.6

Gaming performance is strong overall, with reviewers citing responsive actuation, no meaningful performance limits, high polling, low latency, and fast magnetic-switch features.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

Gaming performance is viewed as competent for casual or secondary gaming, but most reviews still position the board as productivity-first.

hot-swappable switches
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.7

Hot-swap support is widely supported in the reviews, including replaceable switches, 3-pin/5-pin support, magnetic and mechanical switch compatibility, and easy switch experimentation.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.5

Hot-swap support is a well-documented feature and a consistent selling point across the review set.

keycap quality
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.3

Keycap quality is generally positive, with PBT, double-shot, shine-through, frosted, and OEM-profile options praised, although some reviewers found certain caps too smooth, dull, or hollow-sounding.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

The included double-shot PBT keycaps are regularly described as durable, solid-feeling, and appropriate for the premium target.

key responsiveness
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.6

Responsiveness is a major strength in TMR/HE coverage, with reviewers citing low actuation settings, rapid key presses, quick registration, and responsive wired and wireless use; one VIA review noted plug-in lag.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.8

The reviewed typing response feels fast and accurate, with one review explicitly calling out strong speed and confidence while typing.

key spacing
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
3.4

The only direct spacing/layout criticism came from the ISO sample, where the reviewer struggled with the small Shift key and chunky Enter key.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
3.5

One review notes that the spacing differs slightly from standard mechanical boards, creating a brief adjustment period before comfort returns.

key stability
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.6

Key stability is praised across several reviews, with minimal wobble, stable stems, and stable keycaps or stabilizers noted repeatedly.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

One long-term review specifically notes low rattle on stabilized keys, suggesting stable key behavior in day-to-day use.

latency
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.7

Latency evidence is positive, with reviews citing low millisecond results, acceptable latency, no lag, and gaming-focused speed and precision.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Latency is treated as low enough for responsive wired or dongle use, but the board is still framed as casual-gaming friendly rather than esports-first.

layout options
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.3

Layout support is positive overall, with 75% layout, ISO availability, layer remapping, and needed keys praised; one ISO sample had small-key layout complaints.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.7

ISO and JIS availability stand out as meaningful layout additions that broaden the board’s appeal beyond standard ANSI buyers.

legend visibility
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.1

Legend visibility varies by variant: reviewers found backlit or printed legends readable in some versions, while another praised segmented keycap labeling for easier visual spotting.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
3.0

Backlighting is present, but one review says the stock caps do not let light shine through the legends well, which can hurt night visibility.

macro customization
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.6

Macro support is consistently supported through VIA or web software, with reviewers citing macro creation, recording, remapping, and multi-action gaming functions.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Macro support is clearly present and repeatedly mentioned as part of the board’s practical everyday customization set.

materials quality
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.7

Materials quality is a standout strength, with repeated evidence for aluminum construction, premium weight, PBT keycaps, and high-quality materials.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

Reviewers like the material mix of aluminum and ABS, finding it premium enough for the price while keeping the board practical for a low-profile design.

media controls
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.4

The knob appears across many reviews as a major media/control feature, and several reviewers note that it can be reprogrammed, though one found its default usefulness limited.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Media controls are easy to access through knob functions or software remapping, which adds day-to-day convenience.

noise level
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.0

Noise depends heavily on switch and build choice: some reviewers found the board louder or pingier, while others described it as quieter, muted, deep, or very silent.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.5

Noise level depends heavily on switch choice; the silent option is genuinely quiet, but the board still retains recognizable mechanical character with other switches.

onboard memory
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.0

Onboard memory is directly supported in VIA/TMR coverage, with settings saved on the keyboard; one review noted no onboard storage for the 2.4 GHz dongle.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
No score yet
per-key lighting control
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.4

Lighting control is strongly supported through VIA/web software, per-key RGB references, south-facing LEDs, and per-key or software-level lighting adjustments.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
2.8

Reviews explicitly call out the lack of per-key RGB programming, so lighting control is broad but not granular.

polling rate
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.6

Polling-rate support is a strong gaming point in TMR/HE reviews, with multiple mentions of 8K wired/wireless polling and lower Bluetooth polling on VIA models.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.3

Multiple reviews cite 1000Hz wired and 2.4GHz polling, with lower Bluetooth polling, which aligns with its work-first but gaming-capable positioning.

portability
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
2.5

Portability is weak because reviewers repeatedly describe the keyboard as extremely heavy, around 1.75-1.8 kg or over 4 lb, and poor for travel.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Portability remains a clear strength thanks to the compact low-profile build, though several reviews note the V3 is heavier than some earlier or rival options.

profile management
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.6

Profile support appears in the web/software coverage, including quick profile switching, downloadable/shared profiles, created profiles, and onboard-stored settings.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
No score yet
rapid trigger support
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.7

Rapid Trigger is strongly supported in TMR/HE reviews, with fine-grained 0.01 mm adjustments and repeated gaming-oriented praise.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
No score yet
reliability
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
3.5

Reliability is mixed because one reviewer reported random volume ghost inputs and another said the rapid-disassembly case could open when moved, even though normal desk use was fine.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.0

Reliability feedback is mostly positive overall, but a handful of reviewers mention software quirks, connection hiccups, or mode oddities.

RGB customization
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

RGB customization is broadly available through VIA/web software, onboard shortcuts, preset effects, custom effects, profile lighting, and RGB programming.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

Lighting customization is a recurring positive, with reviews noting easy adjustment of main effects and side-light behavior through software.

RGB lighting quality
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.2

RGB quality is mixed by variant: many reviewers praised clean, vibrant, bright, flicker-free lighting, while others disliked dull lighting, blocked light, or charging-indicator behavior.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

RGB lighting is generally well-liked for brightness, effects, or appearance, though one review noticed uneven perceived brightness across rows.

size and form factor
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.4

The keyboard is consistently described as a compact or exploded 75% board with a knob, balancing desktop efficiency with a heavy premium chassis.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.3

The 75% low-profile form factor keeps the board compact and practical while still covering the keys most reviewers expect to use daily.

software quality
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.3

Software is capable but uneven: VIA/web tools offer broad remapping and customization, while reviewers also mention UI quirks, bugs, setup friction, and 2.4 GHz customization limits.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

Software quality is mostly viewed positively for ease of use and capability, though some reviews still mention missing polish or early recognition issues.

sound dampening
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

Sound dampening is well supported by foam, silicone, gaskets, and spacebar treatment, reducing resonance, ping, and hollow spacebar sound in several reviews.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.5

Gasket mounting and internal foam are repeatedly credited with reducing hollowness and harshness, materially improving how the board sounds and feels.

stabilizer quality
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

Stabilizer feedback is positive overall, with lubed stabilizers, minimal wobble, no excessive rattle, and rattle-free stock behavior noted across reviews.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.2

Stabilizers are usually described as solid and low-rattle, especially on major keys, though at least one review stops short of calling them class-leading.

switch feel
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

Switch feel is broadly praised as smooth, responsive, satisfying, stable, creamy, or quiet depending on the installed switches and variant.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.5

Reviewers consistently praise the switch feel as smooth, tactile or well-traveled depending on switch choice, giving the board a more satisfying feel than many low-profile peers.

switch options
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.8

Switch flexibility is a standout strength, especially in TMR versions that can mix magnetic and mechanical switches and support multiple 3-pin/5-pin options.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
3.7

Switch choice covers linear, tactile, and silent options, but multiple reviews still call the overall selection limited compared with some expectations or prior models.

typing comfort
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

Typing comfort is generally positive, with reviewers using it as a daily keyboard or calling it plug-and-play, though comfort depends on layout and typing-angle preferences.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Long-session comfort is a recurring positive, with reviewers highlighting cushioned feel, comfortable profiles, and usable typing angles.

typing feel
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

Typing feel is generally strong, with reviewers describing smooth, soft, cushioned, satisfying, and impressive feel, though foam removal or personal switch preference can change the experience.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.4

Typing feel is a major strength, with reviews repeatedly calling it premium, cushioned, refined, and more pleasant than previous Air models.

value for money
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.5

Value is consistently positive at the cited prices, especially for buyers who value aluminum construction, wireless, customization, and gaming features; one review warned non-modders may pay for unused features.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
3.9

Reviewers generally feel the feature set justifies the price, but several also note that it sits above some competing low-profile options.

volume control
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.4

Volume control is a common knob use case, with several reviews noting default volume control or reprogrammable knob behavior.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
4.1

Volume control works out of the box and is widely mentioned, though some reviewers criticize the knob’s wobble rather than the function itself.

wireless performance
Product 1: MonsGeek M1 V5 HE
4.4

Wireless performance is mostly positive, with stable dongle/Bluetooth use, no lag, low-latency claims, and efficient wireless behavior; Bluetooth wake or minor connection issues appear in some reviews.

Product 2: NuPhy Air75 V3
3.3

Wireless performance is generally useful and fast enough, but a few reviews report isolated Bluetooth or dongle quirks that keep it from feeling flawless.