Epomaker TH87 TKL Offers 10,000mAh Battery, 45-Hour RGB Life for $76
Epomaker announced the TH87 TKL with a 10,000 mAh rechargeable battery, claiming about 45 hours of full RGB use and a ~$75.99 price, arriving in early February 2026.

Epomaker pushed battery life to the fore with the TH87, a tenkeyless mechanical keyboard that packs a 10,000 mAh rechargeable cell and promises roughly 45 hours of full RGB and about 200 hours with the lights off. The company positioned the TH87 as a long-endurance wireless TKL designed to blend portable convenience with budget pricing, targeting roughly $75.99 and early February 2026 availability.
The layout is classic TKL 87-key, but the headline feature is endurance. Multi-host connectivity includes Bluetooth, a 2.4 GHz dongle, and wired mode, so the TH87 aims to cover desk, laptop, and on-the-go setups without forcing frequent recharges. Epomaker equipped announced SKUs with hot-swappable, pre-lubed Sea Salt silent type switches, which reduces immediate need for switch swaps or break-in lubing for users chasing a quieter typing profile out of the box.
Epomaker also focused on acoustics and typing feel. The TH87 uses a gasket mounting approach and five layers of acoustic or sound-optimizing material to tune the sound and impact resilience. Those choices signal a desire to offer a softer, less pingy typing experience without requiring aftermarket foam or elaborate modding. For buyers prioritizing a plug-and-play experience, the combination of pre-lubed switches, gasket mount, and layered dampening is a useful baseline.
Practical value is straightforward: long battery life matters at LANs, school labs, coffee shops, or any session where charging is inconvenient. A 10,000 mAh pack can cut down on daily charging cycles and make true wireless workflows realistic for more users. The price target positions the TH87 as a challenger to budget wireless offerings that either skimp on battery capacity or charge a premium for long runtime.

There are trade-offs to consider. A battery of that size typically adds mass, so expect a heavier board that favors stationary use more than ultra-light travel. Confirmed specifications on weight and charge time remain to be verified by hands-on reviews. Availability in early February gives the community a short runway to compare actual battery performance and typing character against competing gasket-mounted TKLs.
For buyers, the TH87 promises a compelling value proposition: big battery, multi-host wireless, and mod-friendly hardware for about $76. Watch for early reviews to validate the 45-hour RGB claim and to see how Sea Salt silent switches and the acoustic layering translate to real-world thock and feel.
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