Epomaker Glyph gets 20% off, making its typewriter charm cheaper
A 20% cut drops the Epomaker Glyph to $125.10, turning a CES-born typewriter-style 75% board with dual screens into a harder-to-ignore buy.

The Epomaker Glyph is cheaper by 20 percent, and that matters because this is not a generic office slab. Tom’s Guide’s June 11 hands-on said the board stands out with responsive linear switches, a typewriter-like look and sound profile, and dual screens, while its June 25 deal write-up put it at the top of the mechanical keyboard discount pile.
Epomaker lists the Glyph as a 75% tri-mode wireless mechanical keyboard with a retro typewriter design, dual screens and hot-swap switches. The product page also calls out a 2.79-inch screen and an 8000mAh battery, and shows the sale price at $125.10, down from $139.00. That spec sheet tells the story of the board pretty clearly: this is a feature-heavy enthusiast keyboard, not a stripped-down typing tool.
The timing gives the sale extra weight. TechPowerUp said Epomaker officially launched the Glyph on March 13, 2026 after showing it at CES 2026, so this is still a fresh release rather than a long-cleared leftover. Epomaker’s own mid-year sale page also leans hard into the company’s Sound Lab pitch, saying it builds mechanical keyboards, gaming mice and audio gear there. The branding fits the hardware, because the Glyph is built around a sound and look that are meant to be noticed.
Independent coverage painted the same picture from another angle. KBD.news described the Glyph as a retro, mid-century-modern, typewriter-inspired tri-mode wireless keyboard with large displays, and another review pointed to a dual-zone multifunction display, a joystick, macros, RGB lighting and sound-customization layers. That is where the Glyph separates itself from the usual 75 percent crowd: you are paying for personality, screen-driven tinkering and a deliberately tuned typing feel, not just a compact layout.

Compared with the strongest boards in this price band, the trade-off is obvious. A more conventional 75 percent or TKL keyboard may give you a cleaner layout and less visual drama, but it will not deliver the Glyph’s typewriter styling, display hardware or sound-first identity. At $125.10, the Epomaker board becomes easier to defend for anyone who wants a daily driver that also behaves like a desk piece and a mod project. The discount does not just shave dollars off the sticker. It makes the Glyph’s whole argument, charm first and utility second, easier to buy into.
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