IROK FE75 Pro vs Royal Kludge S98
Two of our picks from Best Mechanical Keyboards for the Money, compared side by side on the specs and trade-offs that actually matter.
Specs head to head
| Spec | IROK FE75 Pro | Royal Kludge S98 |
|---|---|---|
| Layout | 75% (81 keys) | 96% (98 keys) |
| Connectivity | Wired, 2.4GHz, Bluetooth 5.0 | Bluetooth (3 devices), 2.4GHz, wired |
| Hot-swap | Yes, 3-pin and 5-pin | Yes, 3-pin and 5-pin |
| Switches | IROK factory-lubed (linear) | RK pre-lubed (multiple options) |
| Keycaps | ABS, OEM profile | Double-shot PBT |
| Dampening | Three-layer silicone | n/a |
| Battery | 3800 mAh | 3750 mAh |
| RGB | Per-key, 16.8M colors | South-facing per-key |
| Extras | n/a | Metal knob + 1.47" color screen |
Our take on each
IROK FE75 Pro
Best for: First-timers who want a cheap, tri-mode, hot-swap board to learn and tinker on.
The FE75Pro is almost suspiciously cheap for what it is: a 75% wireless board with Bluetooth, 2.4GHz, and USB-C, plus true hot-swap sockets that take 3-pin and 5-pin switches. It often sells around the price of a nice dinner, which makes it the easy answer to 'how do I try mechanical keyboards without committing.'
Three layers of silicone dampening give it a cleaner, quieter sound than you would expect down here, and owners consistently call the hardware solid with a stable spacebar.
Two honest caveats. The keycaps are ABS, so they will shine up over time, and the bundled software is genuinely bad, with users warning it behaves like junkware. The good news is you never need it. Treat this as a superb hot-swap starter and you will be grinning.
Royal Kludge S98
Best for: Most people: a feature-loaded 96% board with great stock sound that mostly lives on a desk.
The S98 is the crowd-pleaser of this trio. It is a 96% layout, so you keep a number pad while saving desk space, and out of the box it sounds genuinely good thanks to multi-layer foam, pre-lubed switches, and lubed stabilizers. Reviewers keep reaching for words like creamy and thocky, which is rare at this price.
You also get toys: a metal control knob and a little color screen for mode, battery, and even GIFs. The build is rock solid with no flex, and the double-shot PBT keycaps will not go shiny like cheaper ABS.
The recurring gripes are fair. Battery life with the backlight on is weak, so most people keep it plugged in or charge every day or two, and the software is Windows-only and a bit clunky. For sound-per-dollar with a full feature set, this is the one most people should buy.
More from this guide
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