The NuPhy WH80 is a mechanical gaming keyboard in a tenkeyless (80%) layout with a standard profile and gasket mount construction. It connects via Bluetooth, 2.4GHz wireless, or USB, and supports both wireless and wired operation, with a detachable cable included. The board runs at a polling rate of 8000 Hz and is not designed specifically for Mac. Physically, it measures 357 mm wide, 114.7 mm deep, and 21.7 mm thick, with a weight of 1000 g. It is not designed for Mac use and comes with a one-year warranty.
The NuPhy WH80 features a backlit keyboard with RGB lighting and north-facing LEDs, which is the standard orientation for shine-through keycaps. The case is built from a combination of aluminum and plastic, while the plate itself is aluminum, and the whole unit comes in gray. A wrist rest is included in the package, and adjustable feet allow the typing angle to be modified to suit individual preference.
The NuPhy WH80 uses the NuPhy Magnetic Switch, a Hall effect linear switch with an actuation force of 40 g and a total travel distance of 3.3 mm. The actuation point is fully adjustable, ranging from as shallow as 0.1 mm down to a maximum of 4 mm, giving users a wide range of sensitivity options. The switches are hot-swappable, making it straightforward to replace them without soldering.
The NuPhy WH80 supports analog input, rapid trigger, dual actuation, and adjustable actuation, making it well-equipped for the kind of per-key sensitivity control that Hall effect switches enable. Full N-key rollover (NKRO) is also on board, ensuring every simultaneous keypress is registered accurately. On the other hand, the keyboard does not include USB passthrough, a built-in display, or support for QMK, ZMK, or VIA, so users relying on open-source firmware or community remapping tools will need to look elsewhere for that functionality.
The NuPhy WH80 uses an ANSI (United States) layout with a standard key arrangement, so keycap compatibility is broadly straightforward. The keycaps themselves are OEM-profile PBT double-shot, a durable construction method that keeps legends from wearing over time. Media controls are accessible via the Fn key rather than dedicated keys, and a rotary dial is included for quick on-the-fly input.