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Two HHKB Topre keyboards. Same chassis, same keycaps, same 60% layout. One costs $220.99, the other costs $299.99. The difference is what’s inside the switch and whether or not Bluetooth is along for the ride. I’ve typed on both daily for over a year. Here’s the honest breakdown.
Quick Verdict
- Pick the HHKB Professional Classic Charcoal if: you want pure unsilenced Topre thock, you have one desk, and you’d rather save $80 than pay for wireless you won’t use.
- Pick the HHKB HYBRID Type-S if: you need office-friendly volume, you swap between machines, and you want the most refined HHKB ever shipped.
At a Glance
| Spec | Classic Charcoal | HYBRID Type-S |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $220.99 | $299.99 |
| Switch | Topre 45g unsilenced | Topre 45g silenced (Type-S) |
| Connection | USB-C only | USB-C + Bluetooth 4.2 |
| Battery | N/A — wired | 2x AA (~3 months) |
| Sound profile | Loud, deep, signature thock | Soft, muted, office-quiet |
| Layout | 60% (66 keys) | 60% (66 keys) |
| Keycaps | Dye-sub PBT | Dye-sub PBT |
Sound and Feel
The Classic Charcoal is the keyboard everyone’s hearing on those “satisfying typing ASMR” YouTube clips. Unsilenced 45g Topre produces a deeper, hollower thock than any silenced variant, and the resonance is louder enough that your roommates will know you’re typing. For a stream or a podcast intro, that signature sound is half the appeal of HHKB.
The HYBRID Type-S adds silicone silencing rings inside each slider that take roughly 8-10 dB off the click and dampen the spring return. You lose some of the iconic resonance but gain a board you can actually use in a shared office without getting side-eye. Both feel like Topre — same 45g actuation, same 4.0 mm travel, same electrostatic capacitive read. Only the sound and the impact softness change.
Wireless Trade-Off
If you’re never going to use Bluetooth, you’re paying $80 for nothing. That’s the case for the Classic. It runs USB-C wired only — no battery tray, no antenna, no firmware overhead. Plug it in and type. Latency is effectively zero.
The Type-S adds dual-mode connectivity: USB-C wired or Bluetooth 4.2 with four-device pairing. Battery life on 2x AA cells runs about three months in heavy use. The wireless is honest — pairing is fast, switching between devices uses Fn+Ctrl+1 through 4, and the connection holds. The catch is wireless latency hovers around 7-15 ms, which competitive gamers notice but typists never do.
Build and Layout
Same chassis. Same dye-sub PBT keycaps. Same 60% Sun Type 3 layout. Same six DIP switches under the case for modifier remapping. PFU has been refining this design since 1996 and it shows in the build consistency — both boards feel premium in the same way.
Which Should You Buy?
For a home desk where volume doesn’t matter, the Classic Charcoal is the obvious play. You get the original HHKB thock for $80 less. For anyone who works in a shared space, records calls, or wants wireless flexibility, the HYBRID Type-S is the smarter buy. Both land in our best Topre mechanical keyboard ranking at 9.0+ ratings — pick based on your workspace, not your wallet.
