Keebmon foldable mechanical keyboard PC combines 13-inch touchscreen and full PC
Keebmon folds an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370-powered PC, a 13-inch 21:9 touchscreen with pen support, and a hot‑swappable RGB low-profile mechanical keyboard into a single foldable aluminum unit.

Keebmon bills itself as an all-in-one keyboard PC that folds closed like a travel keyboard and opens into a working machine, combining what the Kickstarter campaign calls “a mechanical keyboard, an ultra-wide 13 inch 10-point touch screen with pen support, and a full PC into one foldable, aluminum device you can carry anywhere.” The campaign has already raised $804,024 on Kickstarter and shows a promotional price block at $639.00, while a hands-on YouTube review frames one configuration as “this radical $2,600 device,” a disparity the campaign and reviewers have not reconciled.
At the heart of the unit is the AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 APU listed across Keebmon materials and press mentions. Core and thread counts diverge between sources: the hands-on reviewer states, “The processor is an AMD Ryzen AI 9HX 370. That's the current generation. Eight cores, [music] 16 threads with integrated graphics that aren't completely useless,” while Gadgetify’s spec copy lists the AI 9 HX 370 as “12 cores and 24 threads.” Geekom-style marketing copy included on reseller pages also references AMD Radeon 890M in promotional lines. Those conflicting core counts and the Radeon 890M reference require confirmation from Keebmon or AMD before buyers accept a definitive spec sheet.
Memory and storage claims also vary. Keebmon’s Kickstarter page advertises configurations up to 96GB DDR5 and up to 8TB NVMe SSD. The hands-on reviewer describes the unit tested as shipping with “32 GB of DDR5 RAM running at 5400 MHz. You can upgrade that to 64 GB yourself because again, it's not soldered to the board,” and adds, “Storage starts at 512 GB, but supports up to 8 TB across both M2 slots. I installed a 4 TBTE drive in the second slot...” Gadgetify and Geekom list up to 64GB RAM in other places, and one Gadgetify passage alternately lists 2TB NVMe, so buyers should treat maximum RAM and total SSD claims as campaign-level promises rather than verified retail specs.
The 13-inch ultrawide display is a prominent selling point. Kickstarter and Notebookcheck call it a 13-inch ultrawide touchscreen while the reviewer refers to the built-in display as a 21:9 ultrawide panel with 10-point touch and pen support and says bluntly, “The screen could be sharper,” but also, “The screen gives me enough workspace to actually be productive.” The keyboard is a selling feature too: Kickstarter describes an “RGB low profile mechanical keyboard” with hot-swappable switches and custom keymap support, and the reviewer reiterates, “The keyboard is genuine mechanical switches that make typing enjoyable.”
Expansion and docking take center stage in Keebmon’s pitch. Campaign and press materials list OCuLink for eGPU support, USB-C x2, USB-A, HDMI, SD card reader, and wireless claims including WiFi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 plus LTE in some copy. The reviewer reports, “OCU Link runs at full PCIe speeds,” and Notebookcheck highlights the device’s ability to “double as a peripheral hub when you’re at a desk.” Power is listed on Kickstarter as a 70Wh battery with 100W PD charging; the reviewer summarizes the trade-offs, “Battery life could be better,” and adds that the unit is “heavier than Ultrabooks” but intentionally so for upgradability.
Beyond specs, reseller-style pages for GEEKOM-like partners claim manufacturing durability tests such as “339 comprehensive tests,” “90 Minutes Vibration Testing,” and “15,000 USB Plug Cycles,” language presented as quality assurances on product listings. The hands-on reviewer’s verdict after extended use is clear: “After 3 weeks ... here's my conclusion. This is the first portable computer that doesn't feel like a compromise,” while tempering that, “Is it perfect? No. Battery life could be better. The screen could be sharper. It's heavier than Ultrabooks. But those aren't design flaws. They're trade-offs [music] made in service of upgradability and performance.”
Keebmon’s foldable keyboard PC is currently a crowdfunded concept with a high degree of promise and several unresolved spec conflicts - CPU core counts, maximum RAM, and final pricing among them. If Keebmon and its retail partners publish a reconciled spec sheet and clear pricing tiers, the combination of hot-swappable mechanical keys, OCuLink eGPU support, and a 13-inch ultrawide touchscreen could genuinely change how portable workstations are built and upgraded.
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