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NuPhy Kick75 dual-profile switch lets you swap feel for work and gaming

NuPhy’s Kick75 pairs a dual-profile design with wireless and software tweaks that aim to make one keyboard feel at home in an office setup and a gaming setup.

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Computer, Electronics, Laptop
NuPhy
CES 2026
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NuPhy’s CES 2026 lineup includes a keyboard that is trying to solve a familiar desk problem. The Kick75 centers on the NuPhy Kick75 dual-profile switch, a mechanism meant to change the board’s feel depending on what you are doing.

The simple promise is a quick shift between low-profile typing and standard-profile gaming. If it works as advertised, you can keep one keyboard on your desk all day and stop treating “work board” and “game board” as separate purchases.

A profile swap on demand

The Kick75’s defining move is that profile change. Low-profile layouts can feel faster and more comfortable for long typing stretches, while a standard profile can feel more familiar for games, especially if you are used to taller keycaps and a higher hand position. If switching to standard profile makes it a gaming keyboard, only real-word testing can determine if it stacks up against the best.

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If the swap is clean and repeatable, it is an elegant idea. If it adds wobble, noise, or uneven feel, it risks becoming a feature you try once and ignore.

The board also leans into a split personality aesthetic with customizable RGB lighting, which is likely to matter to buyers who want a calmer daytime look and a louder nighttime setup.

Wireless specs aim to keep up

NuPhy is also leaning on wireless performance as part of the story. The company is highlighting 2.4GHz wireless, a 1000Hz polling rate, and latency tuning aimed at narrowing the gap with wired use.

That matters because a profile-changing keyboard only feels like one device if it stays consistent across both modes. Reliability, stability, and low-latency behavior are what keep the concept from feeling like two compromises glued together.

NuPhy is also promoting a browser-based driver for quick remaps and lighting tweaks, which could make it easier to set up different modes without installing a dedicated app.

If you’re attending CES 2026, hands-on time should settle the biggest question fast, whether the profile change feels meaningfully different and still stable.

NuPhy lists the Kick75 on its website at $99.95.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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