JezailFunder Launches Kiri MIST Silent Linear Choc V2 Switches
JezailFunder’s Kiri MIST brings a co-developed Choc V2 silent linear to retail with 37 gf, 1.3 mm actuation and a softer bottom-out than rivals.

Low-profile silence usually comes with a compromise: either the switch feels muted and rubbery, or it stays crisp and gives up the quiet. JezailFunder’s Kiri MIST is built to narrow that gap, pairing Kailh co-development with Choc V2 compatibility, a 37 ± 10 gf operating force, about 1.3 ± 0.3 mm actuation, and 2.8 ± 0.25 mm total travel for compact boards and split layouts that live and die by low-profile compatibility.
Retail sales began through JezailFunder’s shop on April 11, 2026, with two pack sizes on offer, 50 switches for ¥6,500 and 80 switches for ¥9,600. That works out to ¥130 a switch in the smaller pack and ¥120 in the larger one, a pricing structure that puts the switch into reach for builders who want to test a set before committing to a full board. The same switch had already appeared as the default option on JezailFunder’s Jiffy75 crowdfunding board, but the standalone release turns a board-specific part into something modders can actually buy on its own.
The hardware story matters as much as the launch timing. JezailFunder says the stem and bottom housing are POM, while the top housing is high-transparency PC, creating the milky look that gives MIST its name. The switch is rated for 50 million actuations, matching the durability expectations that Choc V2 users already associate with Kailh’s low-profile ecosystem. JezailFunder also said tester feedback pushed the operating force up to about 37 gf before retail, a small change on paper that can make a real difference in a short-travel switch where accidental presses and fatigue are always part of the equation.
That tuning is what separates Kiri MIST from the short list of existing low-profile silent options. Early hands-on impressions place it closer to the quiet end of the Choc V2 family, but with less of the rubbery bottom-out that turns some silent switches into a dampened chore. Compared with options such as Kailh’s Deep Sea Island Mini Pink, MIST is being read as a quieter linear that still lands with some definition instead of mush. For people building around Choc V2 footprints, especially in split boards and low-profile customs, that is the real news: another premium silent option that fits the format without feeling like a compromise.
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