Razer Huntsman Mini Special Edition Review — The 60% to Beat
| Switch Performance | 9.5 |
|---|---|
| Build Quality | 9.0 |
| Value | 8.5 |
The Razer Huntsman Mini Special Edition is the benchmark 60% keyboard for competitive gamers and anyone who wants PBT keycaps and optical switches without DIY work.
Description
Quick Specs
| Layout | 60% — 61 keys |
| Switches | Razer Linear Optical Purple (pre-lubed) |
| Actuation | 1.0mm / 45g |
| Keycaps | Doubleshot PBT |
| Backlighting | Razer Chroma RGB per-key |
| Connection | USB-C detachable braided |
| Polling rate | 1000Hz |
| Weight | ~680g |
Source: Razer Huntsman Mini product page
The Razer Huntsman Mini Special Edition is one of the few 60% keyboards that genuinely earns its price. The white colorway, optical switches, and PBT keycaps put it in a different league from the budget boards that dominate the compact keyboard market.
The optical switches are the headline feature. Rather than registering keypresses through physical contact, they use a light beam that registers at 1mm of actuation. That is the fastest switch actuation available in a retail keyboard. For competitive gaming, the difference is measurable. The switches are also pre-lubed from the factory, which takes the scratchy feeling out of linear switches without requiring any DIY work.
PBT keycaps matter more than most buyers realize. ABS plastic, which covers almost every keyboard under $60, develops a shine within months of regular use. PBT keycaps do not do that. The doubleshot legends stay crisp, the texture stays grippy, and the board looks as good after two years as it does the day it ships. On the Special Edition white case, the Chroma RGB lighting shows more intensely than on darker boards.
The USB-C braided cable is detachable, which makes desk routing cleaner and means a damaged cable is a $10 fix rather than a reason to replace the keyboard. Razer Synapse software handles lighting customization, macros, and key remapping. It requires an account, which some users find annoying, but the software itself is mature and reliable.
Downsides worth knowing: there is no wireless option. The FN layer is Razer’s own implementation, which works well but takes a few days to internalize if you are coming from a standard layout. The price is a real premium over budget 60% boards, but the hardware justifies it.
Verdict
The Razer Huntsman Mini Special Edition is the 60% keyboard to buy if you want something that holds up, looks great, and performs at a competitive level. PBT keycaps and optical switches at this price is a strong combination.

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