Logitech’s Signature Comfort Plus keyboard targets hybrid work fatigue
Logitech’s new Signature Comfort Plus line pushes cushioned keys, a dual-foam palm rest, and curved typing angles, turning comfort into the main feature.

Logitech’s latest keyboard pitch is built around a simple idea: if people are spending full days bouncing between laptops, meeting apps, and personal devices, the board should soften the load instead of adding to it. The Signature Comfort Plus line, announced May 26, puts that thinking front and center with the MK880 Signature Comfort Plus combo, a keyboard designed around deep cushioned keys, a dual-foam palm rest, and curved typing angles meant to cut fatigue over long work sessions.
The MK880 is joined by the M850 L mouse with palm cushion support and a more minimalist M840 L mouse, but the keyboard is the clear headline for anyone watching where mainstream input design is headed. Logitech paired the lineup with Easy-Switch for up to three devices, customizable shortcuts, meeting controls, and AI launch access, which makes the package feel tuned for hybrid work rather than a single-desk routine. The business version goes further with Logi Bolt secure wireless and Logitech Sync fleet management, targeting IT teams that want standardized peripherals they can roll out across larger deployments.
For mechanical-keyboard readers, the interesting part is not that Logitech has launched a new office board. It is that a major mass-market brand is leaning harder into the same priorities that drive interest in split boards, wrist rests, layout choice, and softer long-session feel. That overlap has been building for years. Logitech’s Signature K650 already shipped with an integrated soft-touch palm rest, deep-cushioned keys, multi-OS support, and up to 36 months of battery life, while the 2024 Signature Slim K950 focused on easy device switching, quiet keys, SmartWheel scrolling, and software customization. In 2025, the Signature Slim Solar+ K980 extended that productivity-first formula with light-powered charging and up to four months in complete darkness once fully charged.

The comfort message also fits Logitech’s broader numbers-heavy push. The company said it posted $1.15 billion in Q1 FY2026 sales, $1.19 billion in Q2, and $1.42 billion in Q3, while introducing 16 new products in Q2. That kind of steady refresh rate helps explain why a keyboard built around palm support and quieter daily use now sits alongside bigger platform bets instead of feeling like a side project. PCMag’s 2026 ergonomic-keyboard roundup also underscores the same reality: switching to an ergonomic keyboard can take weeks of learning, and Logitech’s Ergo K860 remains the best pick for most buyers.
Logitech’s Signature Comfort Plus does not try to win the custom-board crowd on gasket feel or switch modding. It does something more revealing about the market: it treats comfort as the default expectation, and that is exactly where the next wave of keyboard design is drifting.
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