The HyperX Alloy Rise 75 Wireless is a compact 75% mechanical gaming keyboard with a standard profile and gasket mount construction, measuring 330.8 mm wide, 142.2 mm deep, 48.9 mm thick, and weighing 1021 g. It supports tri-mode connectivity via USB, Bluetooth 5.0, and 2.4GHz wireless, with a detachable cable included for wired use, and polls at 1000 Hz across connection types. Wireless operation is backed by an 80-hour battery life, and the keyboard is not designed specifically for Mac. Physical dimensions and a 2-year warranty round out its general specifications.
The keyboard is finished in black and built from a combination of plastic and aluminum for the case, with an aluminum plate providing internal rigidity. It features a fully backlit layout with north-facing RGB lighting, which positions the LEDs to shine through keycaps more directly. Adjustable feet are included to modify the typing angle, though no wrist rest is bundled with the keyboard.
The keyboard comes equipped with HyperX Red linear mechanical switches, offering a smooth, non-tactile keystroke with an actuation point at 1.8 mm and a total travel distance of 4 mm. The actuation force required is 40 g, keeping inputs light and consistent. All switches are hot-swappable, allowing them to be replaced without soldering.
On the firmware and customization side, the keyboard supports QMK, ZMK, and VIA, giving users a range of options for remapping keys and adjusting behavior at the firmware level. Full N-key rollover (NKRO) is included, ensuring every simultaneous keypress is registered without conflict. The keyboard does not offer analog input, rapid trigger, dual actuation, or adjustable actuation, and it lacks both USB passthrough and a built-in display.
The keyboard uses a standard ANSI (United States) layout with PBT shine-through keycaps in an OEM profile, keeping the key arrangement fully conventional and compatible with aftermarket keycap sets. Media controls are handled through dedicated media keys alongside a rotary dial, providing direct access to functions like volume without relying on function-layer shortcuts.