Releases

VOICSKY debuts in Malaysia with six wireless mechanical keyboards

VOICSKY chose Malaysia for its global debut with six wireless boards, from a RM169 Pulse 75 to a CNC-aluminum Apex 75. That is a full lineup, not a teaser.

Sam Ortega2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Share this article:
VOICSKY debuts in Malaysia with six wireless mechanical keyboards
Source: pokde.net
This article contains affiliate links, marked with a blue dot. We may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

VOICSKY picked Malaysia for its global debut with six wireless mechanical keyboards, and it did not arrive with a single halo product meant to carry the brand. Instead, it set up a pop-up at Fahrenheit88 in Bukit Bintang, running through April 14, with daily hours from 10AM to 10PM and on-ground activities and freebies to get people off the spec sheet and onto the switch tops. That is a smart move in a market where buyers still want to hear the board, feel the case, and test the stabilizers before they spend.

The lineup starts with the Apex 75, a 75% board built around a CNC aluminum chassis, gasket mount structure, hot-swappable switches, a volume knob, and battery life quoted at up to 400 hours. VOICSKY’s other launch models, Echo, Pulse, Atmos, Tune, and Nimbus, broaden the pitch from day one instead of forcing the brand to live or die on one layout. Lowyat listed Malaysian prices at RM349 for the Apex 75, RM219 for the Echo 75, RM239 for the Echo 96, RM169 for the Pulse 75, and RM189 for the Pulse 96, while Sun Cycle’s listings showed multiple switch and color variants for the Echo and Pulse families. That pricing puts VOICSKY squarely in the crowded midrange, where layout, sound, and finish often matter as much as brand recognition.

The company’s own AETHER control panel is web-based and does not require software installation, with support through a Chromium-based browser on Windows, macOS, and Linux. That matters because keyboard buyers have grown tired of clunky vendor apps, and VOICSKY is clearly using software simplicity as part of its sell. Across the range, the boards share tri-mode connectivity, Bluetooth, 2.4GHz wireless, and USB-C, plus 4,000mAh batteries and multi-layer acoustic dampening. In other words, the wireless spec is not an afterthought here, it is the baseline.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The design spread shows how broad the first push is. Atmos adds a detachable pixel-style display and a Stealth Mode option. Tune is a 65% board with a black-and-pink semi-transparent case and a PIXDOT display. Nimbus goes after gaming buyers with a 65% layout, a vertical dynamic display, and RGB lighting. VOICSKY’s slogan, “Speak Thru Voice,” and its six-family lineup suggest a brand trying to build identity around customization, not just connectivity. For Malaysia, the bigger story is simple: another newcomer has entered the market with enough layout variety, wireless features, and price spread to force better value from everyone already on the shelf.

Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?

Submit a Tip

Never miss a story.
Get Mechanical Keyboards updates weekly.

The top stories delivered to your inbox.

Free forever · Unsubscribe anytime

Discussion

More Mechanical Keyboards News