AJAZZ Pixel68 pairs a 65% keyboard with a giant rear display
AJAZZ’s Pixel68 puts a 10.6-inch rear pixel screen on a 65% board, but the real test is whether the typing and wireless spec can justify the space it takes.

AJAZZ’s Pixel68 made its case with the screen first, pairing a compact 65% layout with a 10.6-inch rear-mounted dot-matrix display built from a 52×5 grid and 260 LED beads. The panel can run customized animations, scrolling text, icons, and other visual effects, which pushes the board beyond a standard typing tool and into desk centerpiece territory.
That rear display is the part that will decide whether the Pixel68 feels clever or excessive in a real setup. A 65% board already wins points for freeing up mouse room and shrinking its footprint, and AJAZZ leaned into that smaller-form-factor appeal with a compact chassis. But the company did not treat the Pixel68 like a pure novelty item: it uses an ABS plastic case, a rotary dial in the upper-right corner for volume or programmable shortcuts, RGB backlighting, a gasket-mounted structure, and five layers of sound-dampening material.
Those details matter because display-heavy keyboards can fall apart once the typing side gets ignored. AJAZZ appears to be aiming for a board that still reads as an enthusiast keyboard, not just a screen bolted to a PCB. The gasket mount and damping stack suggest a focus on feel and acoustics, while the dial gives the board a practical control surface that fits a compact desk without adding another accessory.

The spec sheet goes further. The Pixel68 supports USB-C, 2.4 GHz wireless, and Bluetooth, and AJAZZ advertises 8,000 Hz polling in wired and 2.4 GHz modes. It also includes SOCD, Mod-Tap, and Toggle behavior, placing it closer to the feature set serious gaming boards and Hall Effect-style keyboards now use to court performance-minded buyers. A 10,000mAh battery rounds out the pitch, a necessary addition for a board that has to power a large display, RGB lighting, and wireless connectivity at the same time.
That makes the Pixel68 easy to understand from across the room and harder to judge on a desk. The giant rear display is the obvious hook, but the board’s real value will come down to whether the 65% layout, gasket mount, sound treatment, and high-speed connectivity hold up once the novelty wears off.
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