PC lists Darmoshark KT35 CNC 8K one-handed magnetic keyboard
PC put Darmoshark’s KT35 CNC 8K on sale in Japan, a 35-key one-handed magnetic board built to free up mouse space for FPS players.

PC listed the Darmoshark KT35 CNC 8K as a new arrival and said it was in stock, bringing a one-handed magnetic-switch gaming keyboard into Japanese retail at 15,400 with 154 points back and a 1-year warranty. The pitch is aimed squarely at a very specific desk problem: players who want more room for the mouse without giving up the fast actuation tricks that have made magnetic boards so appealing for shooters.
Darmoshark described the KT35 as its first one-handed gaming keyboard with magnetic switches, and the layout makes the intent clear. It uses 35 keys in a compact body measuring 188mm by 110mm by 38.61mm, with an aluminum-alloy base and a CNC-machined nameplate logo. That footprint is the real selling point for FPS use. It leaves a lot more space for broad, low-sensitivity aim corrections than a full-size board or even a conventional TKL, but it also asks the user to live with a stripped-down layout and rebuild a familiar key map from scratch.
The hardware underneath matches the current magnetic-switch playbook. PC listed the switch as the RAESHA magnetic switch RX-0183, with a claimed 100 million keystroke lifespan under normal use. The listed actuation force starts at 35±10g and bottoms out at 50±10g, with initial magnetic flux at 75±15GS and bottom-out flux at 580±80GS. Total travel is 4.0mm. More important for game feel, the dedicated driver lets users set rapid-trigger or button precision from 0.01 to 2.2mm with a zero-dead-zone option, while the actuation point can be adjusted from 0.1 to 4.0mm.

That flexibility is what makes the KT35 more than a novelty. Darmoshark announced the model on April 10, and the broader rollout now looks real: HARUHI ONLINE SHOP also listed the KT35 CNC 8K as a 15,400 preorder, while Darmoshark’s own official store showed it at $79.00 USD. The price and positioning put it in the middle of the fast-growing compact-magnetic segment that has been selling the promise of cleaner mouse movement to players who treat every centimeter of desk space like premium territory.
The KT35’s appeal is obvious if you are chasing more room for flicks and tracking. The hard part is whether you want to relearn your muscle memory to get it. That is the tradeoff sitting behind the 8K label and the rapid-trigger spec, and it is exactly why this listing matters.
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