Razer BlackWidow V4 75% Review — Razer’s Enthusiast 75% Finally Hits
| Sound and feel | 9.5 |
|---|---|
| Build and upgradeability | 9.4 |
| Value for money | 8.7 |
An enthusiast-grade 75% with hot-swap, gasket mount, and pre-lubed switches. The cleanest out-of-box thock in its price class.
$189.99
Description
Quick Specs
| Layout | 75% (81 keys) |
| Switches | Razer Mechanical Yellow (linear, pre-lubed) — hot-swap 3-pin and 5-pin |
| Mount | Gasket mount, FR4 plate |
| Sound dampening | EVA foam + Poron + silicone bottom layer |
| Keycaps | Doubleshot ABS, side-printed legends |
| Lighting | Per-key RGB Chroma |
| Multi-function dial | Yes (volume, scroll, custom) |
| Connection | Wired USB-C, detachable braided cable |
| Polling rate | 8,000 Hz HyperPolling |
| Software | Razer Synapse 4 (Windows) |
Source: Razer official product page
The Razer BlackWidow V4 75% is the keyboard a lot of us assumed Razer would never make. For years the brand chased the gamer-first crowd with floating-key designs, plastic chassis, and clicky greens. The V4 75% flips the script. It is a hot-swappable, gasket-mounted, foam-stacked 75% with a metal chassis and a sound profile tuned closer to custom builds than to a typical prebuilt gaming board. Razer finally read the room.
Build quality is where this bad boy earns its price tag. The frame is aluminum, the plate is FR4 instead of brass or steel, and the gasket mount lets the typing surface flex slightly under bottoming-out — that is the soft, almost cushioned feel enthusiast builders chase. The included Razer Yellow linear switches come pre-lubed from the factory. That is not a small detail. Pre-lubed switches are quieter by roughly 5 to 8 dB and lose the high-pitched ping that plagues most $80 prebuilts. Stabs are also pre-lubed and tuned, which means spacebar rattle is essentially gone out of the box.
The sound profile is the headline. EVA foam between the PCB and plate, Poron under the PCB, and a silicone layer on the bottom of the case. That stack absorbs reverb and delivers a deep, low-pitched thock when you bottom out. It is the closest a prebuilt has gotten to a $400 custom build sound, and it is not even close to the V3 generation. If you have been on YouTube watching keyboard ASMR and wondering whether anything off the shelf can sound like that, this is the answer.
Hot-swap is the second killer feature. The PCB accepts both 3-pin and 5-pin MX-style switches, so you can drop in Akko, Gateron, Kailh, JWICK, or any of the boutique linear and tactile options without soldering. That makes this a board you can grow into. Start with the Razer Yellows for gaming, swap to a tactile like Boba U4T for typing, then experiment with frankenswitches a year later. Most prebuilts at this price are soldered. The V4 75% gives you the upgrade path.
Where it falls short is mostly software and small finishing details. Razer Synapse 4 is required if you want full RGB and macro customization, and Synapse has a long reputation for being heavy on system resources and occasionally buggy on multi-monitor setups. You can use the board fine without it on Mac or Linux, but you lose per-key lighting tweaks. The doubleshot ABS keycaps are durable and the legends will never wear off, but ABS will develop a shine over heavy use within 12–18 months. PBT keycaps would have been a better long-term choice, and you will probably want to swap them eventually. There is also no wireless option — wired USB-C only — so if cordless is non-negotiable, look at the V4 Pro 75% wireless variant or the Aula F75 instead.
Use case fit is wide. For gamers, the 8,000 Hz polling rate and pre-lubed Yellows give you near-instant input with a quiet sound floor — handy if you stream and do not want your keystrokes drowning out your voice. For typists and writers, the gasket-mount feel and tuned acoustics make long sessions genuinely pleasant. For aspiring keyboard hobbyists, the hot-swap PCB plus FR4 plate gives you a sandbox without dropping $400 on a custom kit. The only buyer this does not serve is the budget shopper — at $189.99 this is firmly mid-tier, not entry-level.
Verdict
The BlackWidow V4 75% is the first time Razer has built a keyboard that competes on the same page as enthusiast brands like Keychron Q, Glorious GMMK Pro, and Mode Sonnet. It is not the cheapest 75% you can buy and it is not perfect, but it is the most complete out-of-box package in this size class for someone who cares about sound, feel, and upgradeability. If you want a board that sounds custom without the soldering iron, this is the pick.

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