Price: ₹15,000 - ₹8,821.00
(as of Feb 06, 2025 23:52:13 UTC – Details)
Make your best plays and leave more room for your mouse. The CORSAIR K70 CORE TKL gaming keyboard offers amazing gaming and typing on a compact tenkeyless footprint. Enjoy silky-smooth, wobble-free keystrokes with pre-lubricated CORSAIR MLX Red v2 linear switches, lit by ultra-bright per-key RGB. The K70 CORE TKL typing experience is in a league of its own, as two layers of sound dampening create an ultra-satisfying sound and feel. A multi-function dial and media button are both programmable in CORSAIR iCUE, where you can also save your lighting, settings, and macros on up to five onboard profiles to always have at the ready. Your ambition starts with K70 CORE TKL.
Space-Saving Tenkeyless Layout: The compact tenkeyless footprint fits in tight gaming setups and leaves more room for sweeping mouse movements
Pre-Lubed MLX Red v2 Switches: Pre-lubricated CORSAIR MLX Red v2 linear mechanical switches deliver smooth, responsive, and stable keystrokes, with enhanced ultra-bright per-key RGB backlighting
Ultra-Satisfying Typing Acoustics: Two sound dampening layers made from premium foam material, plus pre-lubricated stabilisers, temper unwanted pings and clacks for pleasantly subdued typing
Masterful Media Control: Control volume and more with a multi-function rotary dial and programmable media button, customisable with iCUE
Sturdy Double-Shot Keycaps: Tough and resilient ABS double-shot keycaps won’t crack under pressure
Anand –
Keys are very compact and uncomfortable
Keys are very compact and uncomfortable.
James B –
The CORSAIR K70 CORE TKL RGB Tenkeyless mechanical wired gaming keyboard is really well built and feels solid. This keyboard is made from good quality plastic and sits firmly on the desk without movement thanks to the rubberized feet. The feet to fold out so you can adjust the angle of the keyboard. The dual layer of padding really does a good job of dampening the sound, and the red switches are audible but not too loud, they sound really great with the double shot keycaps. The keycaps feel good and let the RGB though so you can see the key labels. There are lights on the top left to indicate when your caps lock, win lock, or scroll lock. The volume knob is very handy and the programmable button works well but the layout is a little crowded around these keys.The iCue software is useful and can give you addition control over the lighting and key mapping. Even with this software I was not able to program the multi-function button to be a print screen key, apparently you can only assign keys that exist on the keyboard already, and I use print screen a lot so this is one specific issue that likely does not apply to many people other than me.This keyboard worked very well in both Windows and linux. I did not need drivers for the keyboard to work, but in linux I had to install ckb-next to get the volume know to work.Great keyboard, highly recommended.
Emma –
It’s sad, I really loved this key board’s size, the feel and sound of the switch. Everything worked perfectly for about 3 weeks until this double-typing (key chattering) issue started to occur, making it completely un-usable. I give it to my friends to try on various operating systems, this double-typing (key chattering) issue happens to them as well.It doesn’t seem to be isolated on certain keys. It happens for just about any key but on these keys more often then others: p, a, s and comma. It could just be that I type these keys more frequently. I contacted Corsair support and apparently it is a known issue with this model. They suggested to update the firmware through iCUE app. I did that but the problem persists.It’s a shame that I have to send it back, really expected better quality from Corsair.
Dustin –
Guten Tag ich habe mir die Tastatur gekauft weil ich die Marke an sich gut finde nur es stand nicht bei das es eine englische Tastatur istUnd nach 2-3 mal benutzen bleiben bei einzelnen Buchstaben auf einmal die Farben hängen dementsprechend nicht mit zufriedenMfG Dustin
James Godard –
J’ai acheter ce clavier recu defectueux besoin de le rebrancher pour qu’il sois de renouveau fonctionne donc j’ai demander un remplacement, remplacement recu et toujours defectueux mais maintenant ses les lumière LED et ecris bizarrement donc je ne recommande pas !
Stephen –
Edit:FN+F3 reduces RGB brightness, all the way to off if you want. Found in the online manual, along with a bunch more.Everyone in my household likes it and wants it.Ah and the anti-slip on the bottom is especially well done.This keyboard doesn’t work with my KVM for some reason: keys seem to send unrelated control sequences when plugged through it.Granted that KVM is 6 years old, but it has seen lots of keyboards and hasn’t encountered this issue before.I couldn’t debug it.This is a showstopper for me.I love the feel of this keyboard, and its subdued typing sound.The keys don’t have the bump that I’m used to with other switch types,but I don’t miss it: there’s just enough resistance.Typing feels effortless, fast, and my accuracy is great right out of the box, perhaps even better than with my usual keyboard.It’s certainly not totally silent (not like a muddy membrane keyboard), but somehow the typing sound is politely subdued and mellow.I think it’s not just dampening on the downstroke, but also on the rebound,and I notice there’s just a tad less side-to-side movement on these keys vs my usual keyboard which translates into less rattling noise.So more subdued, but also cleaner sounding.Gaming isn’t my thing, but I think the reduced typing noise will be helpful for cohabitation, work environments, as well as conferencing.(Taking notes during an interview with a mechanical keyboard is pretty awkward, this one should help somewhat.)I guess my tastes have gotten softer over the years.One of my first mechanical keyboards was a Cooler Master Storm QuickFire with green switches: very heavy and very clicky, great for angrily pounding on.Satisfying, but pretty disturbing to others.My son has a cheaper Redragon model that’s clicky, and it’s distinctly audible across the house.I tried the brown switch alternative and never looked back: I didn’t miss the clickiness and the less heavy keys were faster and less tiring.Those are perhaps tolerable in an office environment though still kind of noisy.More recently I’ve been pretty happy with Durgod Taurus keyboards with brown switches.I thought I wanted that bit of a bump, but now I’ve tried these linear reds, I think maybe this softer typing experience is for me after all.I’ve briefly seen a Keychron model with similarly interesting, innovative and quieter switches.Some of those have come down in price to roughly the same as this one, and may be worth considering.(Though the Keycron I saw was disturbingly thicker than other keyboards.)I like that this CORSAIR K70 is the usual minimal height.It has good weight and is stable (without being overly cumbersome to carry around).This model is the kind that leaves a significant gap exposed under the keycaps.(Many of the models I’ve previously owned have a slightly thicker casing which doesn’t leave as much of a gap, which leaves less chances for something to catch under a key when you’re carrying the keyboard.)The RGB lighting isn’t my thing eithere. It’s a bit attention grabbing.I haven’t found a way to turn it off (and I’m not using Windows and won’t be installing the manufacturer’s software).But the default pattern is soft enough, smooth and slow and not flashy, not aggressive, so can probably be tolerated.It won’t talk to my KVM, that’s a big bummer for me.I guess I like it enough I’ll bring it to the office instead.I would have preferred turning off the RGB for that.