hololive and iRocks launch Fubuki-themed K85R PRO keyboard in Taiwan
Fubuki’s Taiwan-only K85R PRO adds serial-numbered scarcity to a spec-heavy iRocks board, but the real draw is still the hololive art.

If you buy collab keyboards for the art and the scarcity, the Shirakami Fubuki K85R PRO lands hard. If you need the board to justify itself beyond the logo, iRocks brought enough actual keyboard hardware to make this more than a wall-hanger for hololive collectors.
hololive English and hololive production said the Taiwan-exclusive release pairs Shirakami Fubuki, the hololive Gamers captain, with iRocks on two products: the K85R PRO triple-mode wireless mechanical keyboard and the T29 flagship ergonomic chair. COVER Corporation framed the project as an exclusive gaming peripheral collaboration for Taiwan, with product-exclusive illustrations and designs built around Fubuki. Pre-orders opened June 1, 2026, at noon Taiwan time, and shipment is expected to begin in August, after the preorder window closes and orders are processed.
The K85R PRO is the part that gives the collab real mechanical-keyboard appeal. It is a wireless board with a 1.14-inch color display, customizable on-screen content, gasket structure, sound-dampening design, hot-swappable switch sockets, and PBT dye-sublimated keycaps. It supports 2.4G wireless, Bluetooth, and USB-C wired use, so it is not just a themed shell with a printed plate. iRocks also highlighted its own independently developed switch, a milk-tea switch, and RGB backlighting in the retail materials tied to the launch.

Scarcity is a big part of the pitch, and iRocks is treating it like a true limited drop rather than a normal regional release. Every keyboard and every chair carries a unique collectible serial number, and retailers are using real-name purchase rules plus purchase limits, both online and offline, to curb scalping and bulk buying. That is the kind of friction you usually see when a collab is expected to get snapped up fast, especially one aimed squarely at a fandom audience.
That leaves the verdict pretty clear. Existing enthusiasts who care about gasket mounts, hot-swap sockets, and wireless modes will find enough here to justify the board on hardware alone. First-time mech buyers will get a polished, feature-rich entry point if they are already in on Fubuki. The strongest pull, though, is for VTuber collectors who want the serial-numbered run and the exclusive art first, with the keyboard itself making the buy feel less like merch and more like a desk-ready piece of gear.
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