Corsair unveils 60% Hall Effect Clipper Pro Mini at Computex 2026
Corsair’s 60% Clipper Pro Mini packs Hall Effect tuning, 8,000Hz polling, and a $99.99 tag, but its bigger bet is deeper ecosystem lock-in.

Does a Hall Effect 60% keyboard get better when it is wrapped in Corsair software, or does it start to feel like ecosystem lock-in? That is the real read on the Clipper Pro Mini 60, the compact board Corsair showed at Computex 2026 as part of a broader push to knit gaming, streaming, and AI computing into one connected hardware stack.
Corsair unveiled its Build Your World showcase on June 2 in Taipei, Taiwan, and used it to introduce four new gaming peripherals. The Clipper Pro Mini 60 was the keyboard centerpiece, but it was not the only signal. Corsair also rolled out the NIGHTSWORD v2 WIRELESS SD Stream Deck Gaming Mouse, the HS35 v3 WIRELESS Gaming Headset, and the HS35 v3 Gaming Headset, underscoring that the company wants its gear to work as a family rather than as isolated parts.
For keyboard buyers, the Clipper Pro Mini 60 lands squarely in the current Hall Effect sweet spot. It uses MGX HYPERDRIVE CORE magnetic switches, supports adjustable actuation from 0.2 mm to 3.8 mm, and adds 8,000Hz hyper-polling. Corsair is also leaning hard into the features that make Hall Effect boards feel distinct from standard mechanical compact boards: Rapid Trigger, FlashTap SOCD behavior, Multi Action, Smart Tap, and Tap Lock. Multi Action can map up to four distinct actions to a single key across press and release travel, which pushes the board beyond simple sensitivity tuning and into macro-heavy, layered control.
The 60% layout is not just a size play. Corsair is positioning it as a desk-space tool for fast mouse movement, which keeps the board relevant to tournament-style setups where every inch counts. The company is also listing IP57 water and dust resistance, a practical touch for a board that is clearly aimed at daily use as much as competitive play. The listed price, $99.99, puts it in a more accessible range than many enthusiast Hall Effect options, which makes the spec sheet easier to take seriously.

The catch is that Corsair is also building a more closed loop around the keyboard. The NIGHTSWORD v2 WIRELESS SD includes a dedicated Stream Deck Launch Button, a sign that Elgato-style controls are moving deeper into Corsair’s gaming hardware. That makes the Clipper Pro Mini 60 more compelling if the goal is one desk, one software stack, and one set of shortcuts. It is less compelling if the appeal of Hall Effect, for you, starts with openness, modability, and the freedom to mix parts from anywhere in the custom scene.
Corsair’s pitch at Computex was not just that Hall Effect is mature now. It was that Hall Effect can sit inside a larger Corsair ecosystem and still feel like a serious compact board. Whether that makes the Clipper Pro Mini 60 a smarter desk companion or a more polished kind of lock-in is the decision point the whole launch turns on.
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