Full specification breakdown for the Redragon K585 PRO wireless one-handed mechanical gaming keypad. Every measurable detail, sourced directly from the manufacturer.
No-distractions Wireless;Long-lasting Durability;Iconic Blue Switches;
Form Factor & Layout
Form Factor
Left-hand one-handed 40%
Total Keys
42 (35 main + 7 macro)
Dedicated Macro Keys
7 (G1–G7)
Footprint
Compact, left-of-keyboard placement
Connection & Wireless
Connection Modes
2.4 GHz / Bluetooth 5.0 / Wired USB-C
Wireless Dongle
USB-A 2.4 GHz nano receiver included
Bluetooth Devices
Multi-device pairing supported
Wired Cable
Detachable USB-C, ~1.5m
Switches & Keycaps
Switch Type
Mechanical, hot-swappable
Default Switch
Outemu Blue (clicky)
Switch Compatibility
5-pin MX-style
Keycap Material
PBT
Keycap Legend
Shine-through for RGB
Battery & Power
Battery Type
Internal rechargeable lithium
Battery Life
30–40 hours with RGB; longer with backlight off
Charging Port
USB-C
Pass-through
Can be used wired while charging
Lighting & Software
RGB Type
Per-key RGB backlight
Onboard Profiles
Multiple, switchable without software
Macro Recording
Onboard + via Redragon software
Software
Redragon utility (Windows)
Build & Accessories
Case Material
Reinforced ABS
Wrist Rest
Detachable, magnetic
OS Compatibility
Windows 7+, macOS
Polling Rate
1000 Hz (wired), 500 Hz (2.4 GHz)
In the Box
Redragon K585 PRO keypad
Detachable magnetic wrist rest
USB-C to USB-A cable
2.4 GHz USB nano receiver
Switch puller
User manual
Verdict on Specs
For a sub-50 dollar gaming keypad, the spec sheet here punches way above its weight class. Hot-swappable switches alone usually run you 20 bucks more on competitors, and the triple-connection setup (wired, Bluetooth, 2.4 GHz) typically only shows up on 80-dollar-plus boards. The PBT keycaps and included magnetic wrist rest are unexpected bonuses at this price. Full review and ranking context lives on the Redragon K585 PRO product page.
I am the main man behind the scenes here. I have been building computers for over 20 years, and sitting at them for even longer. The content I write is assisted by AI, but I currently work from home where I am able to pursue the art of the perfect workstation by day and the most epic battlestation by night.