MelGeek launches Centauri60 and Centauri80 hall effect keyboards with OLED touchscreen
MelGeek’s new Centauri boards pair 8000Hz hall effect performance with a 1.78-inch OLED touchscreen, but the real debate is utility versus keyboard theater.

MelGeek has pushed its Centauri line into the center of the hall effect conversation with two new boards, the Centauri60 and Centauri80. The headline feature is hard to miss on the 80-key layout: a built-in OLED touchscreen aimed at putting controls, status, and tuning tools directly on the board instead of buried in software.
That screen is not a small novelty panel. MelGeek lists it at 1.78 inches with a 368×448 resolution, 326 PPI density, and a claimed maximum brightness of 700 nits plus or minus 50. The company is pitching the Centauri series as its first flagship personalized gaming keyboards with an integrated display, and that framing matters because the market now has to decide whether a high-resolution touch screen on a keyboard is a genuine workflow upgrade or just expensive desk jewelry.
The hardware spec sheet is built for speed either way. MelGeek says the Centauri line uses a third-generation magnetic switch system, 8000Hz polling, and 0.125ms latency, along with Rapid Trigger support, a gasket-mount design, and a multi-MCU distributed architecture. The Centauri60 comes with 66 keys, while the Centauri80 has 83 keys, giving buyers a choice between a tighter 60 percent layout and a more expansive compact board with the display baked in.
The strongest case for the touchscreen is practical. On a hall effect board, a display can make rapid trigger tuning, profile switching, live telemetry, and workflow controls easier to reach when muscle memory matters most. That is the kind of feature that can save time in games, during remapping sessions, or when switching between productivity and play. The counterargument is just as obvious: for many buyers, the decisive factors are still key feel, latency, switch implementation, and whether the hall effect tuning feels truly refined under pressure. If those fundamentals miss, the screen will not save the board.
MelGeek says the Centauri60 and Centauri80 are available now, with pricing shown at $299 and $359 in some listings. The company also says it is backing the launch with free US and EU shipping, 15-day returns, 30-day coverage for quality issues, and a 1-year accessory warranty. Founded in 2014 in Beijing, MelGeek is clearly treating the Centauri launch as a milestone in its move from keyboard maker to broader gaming-peripherals brand, and this one will be judged on whether the touchscreen earns its place beside the switches instead of distracting from them.
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