X68 HE Web Driver
Rapid Trigger, actuation, DKS, Snap Tap, SOCD, Zero Deadzone, profiles, and RGB tuning.

SKU: 1310
Warranty
12 months
Delivery
1-2 days
Returns
14 days
Attack Shark X68 HE Black Gradient magnetic gaming keyboard 60% is a wired 60% magnetic gaming keyboard for PC with Hall Effect switches, 8000 Hz polling, 0.01-3.4 mm Rapid Trigger, and flexible tuning through a web driver. It fits FPS players and daily desk setups that need fast key release, a compact footprint, and stable USB-C input without battery management.
Black Gradient keeps the dark base but adds a visible color transition across the keycaps. It is a solid middle ground between a strict black keyboard and a loud showpiece: with RGB off it still looks mature, and with lighting on it gives the 60% body more depth. This version works especially well with purple, blue, or neon desk accents.

The opening slide shows why X68 HE is worth considering: a compact 60% body, magnetic switches, adjustable actuation, 8000 Hz polling, and wired USB-C. For a player, that means more room for mouse movement, faster key release in strafes, and a stable signal without battery management. It fits CS2, Valorant, Apex, and a daily PC setup where a short keyboard still needs real gaming controls.

8000 Hz polling and the claimed 0.125 ms latency reduce the time between a key press and system response. In practice, this matters most on movement keys, where stopping, tapping again, or changing direction has to feel immediate. X68 HE will not aim for you, but it removes unnecessary input delay: with a stable PC, monitor, and settings, the keyboard is no longer the slow part of a fast FPS chain.

The 0.01-3.4 mm adjustment range lets you make keys extremely sensitive for movement or calmer for typing. WASD can use a short trigger point, while utility keys can keep a deeper actuation to avoid mistakes. That is more flexible than a normal mechanical switch with one fixed point: the same X68 HE can have a training profile, a ranked-match profile, and a daily work profile without changing hardware.

The 0.01 mm RT accuracy and 128K scan-rate slide explains why a magnetic keyboard is not just about the 8000 Hz headline. Consistent sensing across the key travel is what makes Rapid Trigger predictable instead of floaty. This helps counter-strafing, fast peeks, and any moment where a small delay on key release can throw off movement timing. The benefit is control, not a marketing number by itself.

The web driver and PC software cover actuation point, Rapid Trigger, DKS, Snap Tap, SOCD, Zero Deadzone, RGB, and profiles. That matters after purchase because you are not locked into one factory feel: you can build one profile for FPS, another for typing, and a quieter lighting mode for night use. The best approach is to tune gradually so the keyboard stays fast without becoming too sensitive to accidental touches.

South-facing RGB lights the keys from the user side and keeps legends easier to read in a dark setup. PBT keycaps feel better for long typing, resist shine better than basic ABS, and hold their texture longer. The lighting can be bright for a visual gaming desk or toned down when the keyboard has to work like a clean daily tool. That balance matters on a compact board that sits close to the monitor.

The exploded slide shows the structure: TOP mount, aluminum positioning plate, PORON foam, bottom foam, PCB, and magnetic switches. These layers are not just checklist items; they affect feel by reducing hollow resonance, making the sound denser, and keeping the switch plate more consistent. The ABS case keeps X68 HE lighter than higher-end full-metal boards, while the dampening helps it feel more refined in daily use.
Rapid Trigger, actuation, DKS, Snap Tap, SOCD, Zero Deadzone, profiles, and RGB tuning.

