Ergonomic keyboards have a reputation problem. They work, technically, but most of them look like they were designed by someone who’d never sat through a full workday. The splits are too wide, the angles too aggressive, and the learning curve steep enough to make you miss the flat keys you’ve always known. Plenty of people give it a try and quietly go back to what they had before.
Razer’s answer is the Pro Type Ergo, its first wireless split ergonomic keyboard, built with that frustration clearly in mind. Rather than throwing you into a radical new layout, it’s tuned to feel approachable from the very first keystroke. The split gently angles your hands into a more natural alignment, easing the sideways reach that makes most forearms ache by mid-afternoon, without asking you to completely relearn how to type.
Designer: Razer
One of the more interesting layout choices is the dual “B” key arrangement, with one on each side of the split, along with an extra backspace tucked between two space bars. The idea is that both thumbs take on common actions, so you’re reaching less and crossing your fingers over each other less throughout the day. It’s a small shift that makes more sense the longer you sit with it.
The keycaps are ultra-low-profile, fitted with subtle spherical indents that nudge your fingertips into the right position without you having to think about it. Sound-dampening layers and tuned stabilizers underneath keep the typing noise low enough for open offices and video calls. Shorter key travel also means less physical effort per keystroke, which doesn’t sound like much until you’ve been at your desk for six hours straight.
The wrist rest is permanently integrated rather than removable, which turns out to be a feature rather than a limitation. It’s just always there, supporting your wrists from the moment you sit down without any extra setup. A 10-degree base slope sets the starting angle, and five tilt positions, from flat to seven degrees forward or back, let you dial in the fit depending on your desk height and preference.
A Razer Command Dial lets you assign up to eight functions, expandable to 100 via Razer Synapse, while five macro keys along the left side keep your most-used shortcuts within easy reach. There’s also a dedicated AI Prompt Master key that handles things like drafting emails, summarizing blocks of text, or kicking off a research query in a single press, without pulling you out of whatever window you’re already in.
Connectivity spans Razer HyperSpeed Wireless at 2.4 GHz, three Bluetooth profiles, and USB-C wired mode, with support for up to five devices total. Razer Chroma RGB backlighting covers 19 customizable zones and can be switched off entirely for offices where animated key lighting might not go over well. The design is clean and understated, a far cry from the aggressively lit gaming keyboards Razer is better known for.
The Pro Type Ergo retails at $189.99, about $30 more than Razer’s conventional Pro Type Ultra from 2021. For anyone who types for a living and has been quietly working around the ache of a standard keyboard layout, that extra cost starts to feel a lot less significant once you’ve spent a full day on something that actually fits how your hands are supposed to sit.
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