Both keyboards share a strong wired-only foundation — USB connectivity, a detachable cable, and a standard profile — making them equally straightforward to set up and maintain. Neither is designed for Mac, so both target the same Windows-centric gaming audience. The similarities, however, end there quickly once you look at size and form factor. The Logitech Pro X TKL Rapid is a Tenkeyless (80%) board measuring 357 × 150 mm and weighing 910 g, while the Wooting 60HE v2 is a Compact (60%) board at 302 × 116 mm and just 605 g. In practice, this means the Wooting occupies meaningfully less desk space and is considerably lighter — relevant for LAN travel or setups with limited room, though the trade-off is the loss of function keys and the navigation cluster.
The most technically significant gap is the polling rate: the Pro X TKL Rapid runs at a standard 1000 Hz, while the Wooting 60HE v2 operates at 8000 Hz. A higher polling rate means the keyboard reports its state to the PC eight times more frequently, reducing input latency from roughly 1 ms to ~0.125 ms. For the vast majority of users this difference is imperceptible, but for competitive players chasing every millisecond of response time, the Wooting's 8000 Hz polling is a tangible edge. Warranty coverage also diverges: the Wooting offers 4 years versus the Logitech's 2 years, reflecting greater long-term value protection.
Overall, the Wooting 60HE v2 holds the clear advantage in this group for performance-oriented metrics — it leads on polling rate, weighs significantly less, and carries a longer warranty. The trade-off is a more compact layout that removes keys some users rely on daily. The Pro X TKL Rapid suits those who want a more complete key set and a familiar TKL footprint, but concedes on raw responsiveness and coverage duration.