Epomaker TH108 V2 Pro adds screen, knob, and side lighting to full-size board
Epomaker's TH108 V2 Pro keeps the 100% layout but turns it into a desk hub with a TFT screen, front knob, and side lighting, backed by a 10,000 mAh battery.

Epomaker is making a clear case that full-size keyboards are not dead weight. The TH108 V2 Pro keeps the 100% layout that office users, programmers, and anyone juggling spreadsheets and chat windows still lean on, but it layers in a TFT screen, a front rotary knob, and side ambient lighting to make the board feel more like a control center than a plain typing slab.
That matters because the appeal of a full-size board has always been obvious to people who actually use the numpad. The TH108 V2 Pro is aimed at PCs, laptops, and phones, and Epomaker describes it as a tri-mode model with a 10,000 mAh battery. On its product page, the company also calls it a tri-mode powerhouse with an interactive screen and a 5-layer gasket feel, which pushes the pitch well beyond novelty lighting. The switch menu includes EPOMAKER Sea Salt Silent V2 and Creamy Jade, a sign that this is being sold as a daily driver, not just a desk toy.
The V2 Pro is also an evolution, not a first draft. Epomaker’s earlier TH108 Pro already used a 100% full-size layout with a TFT smart display, knob, and 10,000 mAh battery. A recent review of that model said the TFT screen and numpad were the standout features, which is exactly why the new version leans harder into those touches instead of treating them as garnish. The new side lighting and front knob are the sort of additions that can actually help in a busy work setup if they make status, volume, or lighting changes easier to reach without dropping back to software.
Pricing shows how Epomaker is stacking the family. The TH108 Pro is listed at $98.99, while the original TH108 appears at $75.64 and is framed as a full-size board built for typing and office use. Amazon’s listing for the TH108 V2 Pro says the 10,000 mAh battery can deliver up to 200 hours of continuous use, which is the sort of number that matters when a board is expected to move between a desk, a laptop bag, and a wireless setup without constant charging.
Epomaker is backing the same full-size thesis across the lineup, too. The company also launched the HE108 in April 2026 as another productivity-and-gaming board, and its TH-series overview describes the TH108 Pro as productivity-focused. The message is simple: if a 100% board earns its footprint with a screen, a knob, long battery life, and real multi-device flexibility, it still has a place on the desk.
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