SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini Wireless Review — Best 60% Gaming Keyboard
| Switch Performance | 9.8 |
|---|---|
| Wireless Reliability | 9.0 |
| Build Quality | 8.8 |
The SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini Wireless pairs adjustable OmniPoint 2.0 Hall Effect switches with dual-band wireless (2.4GHz + Bluetooth) in a compact 60% chassis — the top pick for serious gamers who want a smaller footprint without sacrificing switch quality.
$199.99
Description
Quick Specs
| Form factor | 60% (61 keys) |
| Switches | OmniPoint 2.0 magnetic (Hall Effect), adjustable actuation 0.1–4.0mm |
| Connectivity | 2.4GHz (Quantum 2.0) + Bluetooth 5.0 + USB-C wired |
| Battery life | Up to 200 hours (lighting off); ~40 hours (RGB on) |
| Keycaps | PBT doubleshot |
| Backlighting | Per-key RGB (SteelSeries Prism) |
| Dimensions | 11.5 x 3.9 x 1.6 in |
| Weight | ~0.96 lbs |
| Cable | USB-C detachable |
| Compatibility | Windows, macOS |
Source: SteelSeries official product page
The SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini Wireless gets one thing right that most keyboards at any price get wrong: it lets you decide how the switches feel. OmniPoint 2.0 magnetic switches run on Hall Effect technology, which means there’s no mechanical contact point to wear down. Actuation adjusts from 0.1mm all the way up to 4.0mm through SteelSeries’ GG software. A competitive FPS player can set hair-trigger actuation. Someone doing heavy typing all day can push actuation deeper for a more deliberate keypress. That kind of real-time flexibility is unusual.
The wireless is dual-band. Gaming sessions run on 2.4GHz where SteelSeries’ Quantum 2.0 protocol keeps input latency in the single-digit millisecond range — on par with wired setups in practice. Bluetooth 5.0 handles everything else: switching to a laptop, a phone, or a second machine without touching a cable. Battery life lands around 40 hours with RGB on and can stretch significantly longer with lighting off.
Build quality is premium. The housing is aircraft-grade aluminum. It doesn’t flex. Keycaps are PBT doubleshot — legends won’t fade even with heavy daily use. The per-key RGB runs through SteelSeries Prism, which is one of the cleaner lighting engines available: per-key color assignment, reactive effects, syncing with other SteelSeries gear. For a 60% board the lighting density is impressive since there’s less real estate to spread the effects across.
The 60% layout is strict: no arrow keys, no function row. Everything goes through layers using the Fn key. If you haven’t used a compact keyboard before, there’s a learning curve. Most people adapt in a few days; some never do. That’s not a knock on the Apex Pro Mini specifically — it’s the trade-off of the form factor. The payoff is a dramatically smaller footprint and significantly more mouse room on your desk.
The price is real. $199.99 puts this in premium keyboard territory. At that number you’re buying best-in-class switch technology, dual-band wireless from a brand that actually supports their products, and a build that’s going to outlast budget alternatives by years. If you’re comparison shopping with $50 keyboards, this isn’t the right list to be on. But if you want the best compact gaming keyboard available and you’re comfortable with the 60% layout, there’s nothing here to argue with.
Verdict
The SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini Wireless is the best 60% gaming keyboard available at this price point. Adjustable Hall Effect switches, reliable dual-band wireless, and premium PBT keycaps in a chassis that won’t rattle or flex. It’s expensive because it earns it.

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