Montech MKey Pro Update Tackles Firmware Flaws, Adds Wireless Improvements
Montech's MKey Pro update fixes the firmware and wireless issues that plagued its keyboard debut, turning a promising-but-rough first entry into a credible tri-mode hot-swap option.

Firmware is where keyboards go to die in the community's estimation, and Montech's original MKey had enough rough edges in that department to give early adopters pause. The Pro update, which drew renewed attention this past week, addresses those criticisms directly: improved wireless multi-mode support, cleaned-up firmware quirks that frustrated initial buyers, and clarified platform compatibility across Mac and Windows.
The headline addition is tri-mode connectivity, giving users a choice between wired USB, 2.4GHz wireless, and Bluetooth. That combination at an accessible price point puts the MKey Pro in direct conversation with the segment of the market where wireless hot-swap boards have historically required either a boutique group buy or a premium price tag. Montech's position as an established name in PC cases and cooling gear means its distribution infrastructure, spanning Amazon, Newegg, and regional retailers, gives the MKey family shelf presence that most keyboard-first brands can't match out of the gate.
The underlying hardware specification hasn't changed from what made the original MKey interesting. Hot-swappable sockets, MDA-profile PBT keycap sets, acoustic absorbent pads, and Gateron G Pro-style pre-lubed switches remain the baseline. The Pro treatment layers case and acoustic refinements on top of that foundation, targeting the out-of-the-box sound and feel that matters to buyers who aren't planning to spend an afternoon modding before first use. The Osaka Castle-inspired colorways that distinguish the MKey line visually are carried forward as well.
What the Pro update really represents, though, is a signal about intent. Manufacturers entering the keyboard space from adjacent categories have a long track record of treating their first keyboard SKU as a marketing exercise rather than a platform. Montech appears to be doing the opposite: taking reviewer feedback, teardown criticism from YouTube, and forum complaints seriously enough to push a meaningful firmware revision rather than quietly letting the product coast. That responsiveness is precisely the difference between a board that accumulates a small community of advocates over time and one that gets one round of coverage before fading from consideration.
For anyone who evaluated the original MKey and walked away over the wireless reliability concerns or firmware instability, the Pro update is worth a second look. The spec sheet was never the problem; the last-mile execution was. Montech has now addressed the part that was actually holding it back.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

