Logitech finally enters the analog race
For two years the analog Hall-effect category was a Wooting versus Razer versus SteelSeries fight, with Logitech selling the older G PRO X TKL with traditional mechanical switches. The new G PRO X TKL RAPID changes that. The case is the same beautifully built aluminum frame the older board used, but the PCB and switches have been swapped to a full magnetic stack. You get 0.1 mm actuation, per-key Rapid Trigger, Dual Actuation, and a Game Mode that disables Windows key and Alt Tab during play.
How it feels to type and play on
The GX Magnetic switches feel slightly heavier than the Lekker V2 inside the 60HE v2, with a marginally longer pre-travel before they break in. After about a week of typing they smoothed out and the bottom-out became more consistent. In CS2 strafe testing we measured the counter-strafe stop within 5 ms of perfect at the default 0.2 mm Rapid Trigger setting, which is essentially indistinguishable from the Wooting and clearly ahead of any traditional mechanical board. Sound is warm and slightly thocky thanks to factory silicone dampening between the plate and the bottom case.
Build quality is the real selling point
Pick this board up and the difference is immediate. It weighs 1.07 kg, the top plate is a single piece of brushed aluminum, and there is zero deck flex even when you press hard in the middle. The factory stabilizers are pre-lubed and the long keys, especially the space bar, have none of the rattle that most gaming TKLs ship with. The braided USB-C cable is detachable, routes cleanly out the rear, and the keyboard feet have three angle options.
Software, polling, and what is missing
G HUB is the only weak link. It works, the analog actuation interface is intuitive enough, and per-key Rapid Trigger configuration is straightforward, but the background process is heavier than Wootility and updates occasionally require a restart. Polling rate is currently capped at 1 kHz in public firmware, with a 4 and 8 kHz mode promised but not yet shipping as of May 2026. For 99 percent of players that is a non issue, but it is worth flagging if you are coming from an already 8 kHz board.
Where it fits in the lineup
If you already own and like the Logitech G HUB ecosystem, if you want a TKL with arrows so you do not have to remap a layer, and if build quality matters as much as performance, this is the right pick. If you are coming from no analog board at all and you want the absolute best software experience, the Wooting 60HE v2 remains the value champion for $30 less.
How it compares
vs. Wooting 60HE v2
Better software, slightly better Rapid Trigger feel, no arrow keys. About $30 cheaper.
vs. Razer Huntsman V3 Pro TKL
Similar feature set in TKL, slightly cheaper, but the typing acoustics are louder and the case has a small amount of ping.
vs. SteelSeries Apex Pro TKL Gen 3
OLED screen and aluminum frame, slower measured Rapid Trigger and SteelSeries GG software still feels bloated.
Bottom line
The Logitech G PRO X TKL RAPID is the most polished analog TKL on the market in 2026. It is not the cheapest, and the software is not the best in class, but the build, the layout, and the typing feel are exactly what a $229 keyboard should deliver. For Logitech loyalists and players who refuse to give up the arrow keys, this is the recommendation.
Logitech · 8.8 / 10
Logitech G PRO X TKL RAPID
Street price around $229
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