Logitech Genshin Impact TKL keyboard gets a surprise 56 percent discount
Logitech’s G515 Kamisato Ayaka Edition just fell to $69.99, turning a licensed Genshin Impact TKL from collector bait into a real value play.

Logitech’s Genshin Impact TKL has crossed from fandom piece into serious keyboard deal territory. The G515 LIGHTSPEED TKL Kamisato Ayaka Edition is down to $69.99, a $90 cut and about 56 percent off, which puts a licensed special edition low-profile wireless board within striking distance of far less flashy alternatives.
That price shift matters because this is not a novelty shell or a desk ornament. Logitech pitches the Ayaka model as a tenkeyless mechanical keyboard with LIGHTSPEED wireless, Bluetooth, and wired mode, plus GL mechanical switches and a 22 mm low-profile design. It is built like a daily driver first, then dressed in Kamisato Ayaka styling for Genshin Impact fans. Amazon’s listing also frames it as a limited-time deal and highlights the custom Ayaka design, reinforcing that the appeal here is equal parts layout, function, and theme.

The bigger question for mechanical keyboard buyers is whether the collaboration tax finally drops low enough to justify the board on merit alone. At full price, themed boards often struggle against cleaner value picks from mainstream makers, especially when buyers are comparing switch feel, wireless behavior, and software support rather than artwork. At $69.99, the Ayaka edition becomes much easier to treat as a compact low-profile TKL with real wireless flexibility instead of a pure collector item. If the G515 family already fits your typing preference, the discount takes a lot of the sting out of the licensed premium.
Logitech’s own standard G515 LIGHTSPEED TKL is listed at $159.99, which makes the Ayaka sale look even sharper. The special edition is sitting far below that baseline while keeping the same tenkeyless shape, tri-mode connectivity, and Logitech G wireless ecosystem. For buyers who want a TKL that can handle desk work over Bluetooth, gaming over LIGHTSPEED, and a wired fallback when needed, that is a concrete jump in value.
The sale also lands in the shadow of Logitech’s broader Genshin Impact partnership. Logitech said the collaboration was the start of a multi-year deal and signaled more products ahead, including headsets, keyboards, and keyboard-mouse bundles. That context makes the Ayaka board feel less like a one-off merch drop and more like part of a larger licensed hardware push, which is exactly why a steep discount changes the buying calculus. What was easy to dismiss as a collector’s flex now looks like a legitimate TKL option with enough price relief to compete on the terms keyboard enthusiasts actually care about.
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