GravaStar has officially launched the Mercury V75 Pro, a new high-end gaming keyboard that looks like it was forged in a dystopian sci-fi lab/ Available from today at GravaStar.com, Amazon, and “selected retailers worldwide” (you know the type), the Mercury V75 Pro is being pitched as the brand’s most advanced bit of kit yet—and judging by the specs and visuals, they’re not bluffing.
At the heart of the V75 Pro is a mouthful of a switch: the Hall Effect Gateron Jade Gaming Magnetic Switch. Beyond sounding like something Tony Stark might have installed in an Iron Man keyboard, this tech is built for speed and precision—boasting 0.005mm actuation accuracy, an 8000Hz polling rate, and a lightning-quick 0.125ms latency. That’s basically the keyboard equivalent of “blink and you’ll miss it.”
This means faster inputs, adjustable actuation points (so you can tweak exactly how far you need to press), and the kind of mechanical feedback that’s been described as having a “HiFi Mahjong” sound profile, which I’m guessing is a fancy way of saying it clicks and clacks like a dream. I mean, let’s be honest, a satisfying clicky sound is about 75% of the reason for owning a nice keyboard.
Of course, it wouldn’t be a “gaming” keyboard without bold, eccentric styling, and the V75 Pro delivers in full. It comes in three flavours:
- Neon Graffiti – a hand-painted, street art-inspired finish that gives each board its own unique identity, complete with a “player code” tag like you’re joining some RGB cyber-gang.
- Iron Purple – sleek, metallic, and slightly more reserved (for those who only want half the attention).
- Cyberpunk – no-nonsense baked metallic styling, dripping in industrial edge.
Each model also features triple-sided RGB frame lighting, footlights, and per-key illumination—because what’s a gaming keyboard in 2025 if it doesn’t glow like a neon nightclub?
Underneath all that flair is a full aluminium alloy chassis and gasket-mounted structure for a premium, flex-free typing experience. The PBT double-shot keycaps should keep things looking crisp even after years of sweaty clutch moments, and GravaStar’s web-based software lets you customise lighting, remap keys, and tweak macros to your heart’s content.
Now, if your wallet’s already feeling nervous, fair warning: the Mercury V75 Pro doesn’t come cheap.
- Neon Graffiti edition – £249.95 / €259.95 / $259.00
- Iron Purple & Cyberpunk editions – £229.95 / €239.95 / $239.95
There’s also a Standard version at £169.95 and a more wallet-friendly Lite model for £99.95, though these drop some of the higher-end switch magic and materials.
I’m currently in talks to get a review sample, so hopefully I’ll be able to let you know if it’s worth the cash.