Thursday, September 16th 2021

Razer Announces Huntsman V2 High Performance Keyboard

Razer, today announced the Razer Huntsman V2 line, with a suite of upgrades and enhancements to create the fastest, most advanced optical gaming keyboards in the world. The new features include Razer's 2nd generation Optical Switches, Razer 8k HyperPolling Technology, and Doubleshot PBT keycaps, as well as improved acoustics, made in response to player and community feedback.

Since its launch in 2018, the Huntsman family of keyboards has grown in popularity to become the best-selling gaming keyboard in the U.S., setting new standards for innovative, high-speed, gaming-grade keyboards. The new Huntsman V2 range is set to continue that legacy with a range of upgrades and refinements focused on the fundamentals of a great gaming keyboard; performance, feel, and acoustics.
2nd Generation Optical Switches

The Huntsman V2 is available with Razer 2nd Generation Linear Optical Switches, which have been refined and tweaked based on player and user feedback. Foremost in these refinements is the addition of a silicon sound dampener, to reduce the 'clack' of the key bottoming out during use, which greatly improves the typing experience. The switches also feature more generous lubrication on the switches and stabilizers, for even smoother operation and increased noise reduction.

The Razer 2nd Generation Linear Optical Switches use an infra-red beam of light to activate the switch signal, which completely eliminates debounce delay, the delay traditionally built into mechanical switch keyboards to ensure a contact signal is a true keypress. With no debounce delay, Razer 2nd Generation Linear Optical Switches can take advantage of Razer HyperPolling Technology, surpassing the 1000 Hz polling rate of standard keyboards and ramping up to a blistering true polling rate of 8000 Hz. These two high-speed, high-performance technologies combined give the Huntsman V2 near-zero latency for the fastest, most responsive gaming keyboard in the world.

Upgrades, Upgrades, Upgrades

In response to feedback from the community and eSports athletes, the Huntsman V2 has also been upgraded in other areas. Doubleshot PBT keycaps, for extra durability and resistance to aluminium as standard on the Huntsman V2. The two-stage molding process used in creating the keycaps results in fadeproof legends, even after hundreds of hours of use, with a textured finish for a secure fingertip grip and positive typing action.

To improve keyboard acoustics, a series of sound dampening features have been added through the chassis, to absorb pings and thunks as the keys bottom out during use. A sturdy matte aluminium top plate keeps the keyboard rigid with minimal flex, even under the most intense key pounding, and a sculpted, ergonomic wrist rest fits perfectly to the front of the Huntsman V2 for added support and pressure relief during long sessions.

The Huntsman V2 is equipped with a Multi-function Digital Dial and 4 dedicated, customizable media keys for extended usability outside of gaming. Fully programmable through Razer Synapse 3, the Huntsman V2 features 7 preset Razer Chroma lighting effects, with a selection of up to 16.8 million colors, for complete personalization. The hybrid on-board memory can be used to save settings, macros and color schemes for access anywhere, anytime, even without access to cloud storage.

The Huntsman V2 Tenkeyless

Also announced today is the Huntsman V2 Tenkeyless keyboard, the leaner, lighter little brother to the Huntsman V2. Mirroring many of the features of the full-sized Huntsman V2, the Huntsman V2 Tenkeyless eschews the number pad, dial, and media keys in favor of portability, but retains the new features and upgrades seen in the Huntsman V2 including the new Razer Linear Optical Switches Gen-2, Razer HyperPolling Technology for true 8000 Hz polling, Doubleshot PBT keycaps, sound dampening measures and ergonomic wrist rest. The Huntsman V2 Tenkeyless also features a detachable USB-C cable for ease of transport for players on the go and is fully compatible with Razer Synapse 3 for up to 16.8 million color customization and on-board hybrid memory for macro and settings storage.

Announcement Video


Pricing & Availability

The Razer Huntsman V2 and Razer Huntsman V2 Tenkeyless are now available to purchase.

Razer Huntsman V2:
  • $189.99 USD / €199.99 MSRP - Clicky Purple Switch
  • $199.99 USD / €209.99 MSRP - Linear Red Switch
Razer Huntsman V2 Tenkeyless:
  • $149.99 USD /€159.99 MSRP - Clicky Purple Switch
  • $159.99USD /€169.99 MSRP - Linear Red Switch
Source: Razer
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8 Comments on Razer Announces Huntsman V2 High Performance Keyboard

#1
Tardian
Looks good. My son uses a similar Corsair K70 RGB Mk.2
Posted on Reply
#2
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
I have the first gen TKL, and seriously the noise and lack of wrist rest are my only complaints, and they're bearable.

Even synapse is decent these days.
Posted on Reply
#3
Ferrum Master
MusselsEven synapse is decent these days.
Let's not be too hasty.
Posted on Reply
#4
Gmr_Chick
Digging the TKL but those prices? Yeah....hell no.

I feel like it'll take one hell of a board to get me to part with my HyperX Alloy Origins Core.....
Posted on Reply
#5
Operandi
Gmr_ChickDigging the TKL but those prices? Yeah....hell no.

I feel like it'll take one hell of a board to get me to part with my HyperX Alloy Origins Core.....
Yeah, I'm looking at that TKL too.. I have a full sized now and would really like the smaller foot print. Also really like clean minimal design of Razer's implementation (no stupid media keys or knobs) which I feels odd saying about a Razer product.


Mechanical keyboards are expensive in general and optical switches and those PBT keycaps all add up so the price is probably in line with where it should be. Razer makes a lot of overpriced gmiicky garbage that just begs people to want to rip on them but this isn't one of those things.
Posted on Reply
#6
katzi
It'd be nice if they did a White version.
Posted on Reply
#7
Gmr_Chick
m2geekIt'd be nice if they did a White version.
They more than likely will at some point, given there's a white version of the Huntman Mini.
Posted on Reply
#8
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
OperandiYeah, I'm looking at that TKL too.. I have a full sized now and would really like the smaller foot print. Also really like clean minimal design of Razer's implementation (no stupid media keys or knobs) which I feels odd saying about a Razer product.


Mechanical keyboards are expensive in general and optical switches and those PBT keycaps all add up so the price is probably in line with where it should be. Razer makes a lot of overpriced gmiicky garbage that just begs people to want to rip on them but this isn't one of those things.
I have to agree. a few years ago i'd never have touched a razer product, but the keyboards are good. The V1 TKL sucked because it missed out on features the full size keyboard had, but was still genuinely good despite that... or i wouldn't have two of em

they also have limited hardware lighting (some default static/animated profiles) and macro/customised key bindings profile support (save 4 sets to firmware) so they dont even need synapse
Posted on Reply
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