Smaller keyboards can be better keyboards. The 60 percent form factor strips away unnecessary keys and uses layers to stack important functions to create a pleasantly compact, perfectly functional and efficient keyboard. Mechanical keyboard enthusiasts have been singing the 60 percent keyboardâs praises for years. Now mainstream keyboard maker Razer gets in on the act with the new Huntsman Mini.
The $120 Miniis the latest and smallest keyboard in Razerâs popular Huntsman line. Itâs an opto-mechanical keyboard, utilizing Razerâs recently-upgraded clicky purple and red linear keyboard switches. These optical switches activate using a beam of light rather than standard mechanical contact, which Razer says makes them last much longer than traditional keyboard switches. Iâve only been typing on my Huntsman Mini for a couple of weeks, so I couldnât say.
The Huntsman Mini includes all the bells and whistles one expects of Razerâs line of gaming keyboards. Itâs got that Chroma lighting. Itâs programmable, supporting multiple layers of complex commands and macros. Itâs just got a whole lot fewer keys.
A standard full-size keyboard is 101 to 104 keys. A tenkeyless board cuts the number pad off the right side, making accountants sad. A 60 percent board further slims things down by losing the arrows and middle functions and stripping out the entire F-Key row.

All of the standard keyboard functionality is still there. Itâs just that less-used functions are assigned to different keyboard layers. If I need to use the âprt scâ command, I hold down the function key (FN) and press the P key. If I need to hit F3 for some reason, I hold down FN and press 3. My arrow keys are now FN plus I, J, K, and L.
What makes the Huntsman Mini such a great intro to the smaller form factor is the boardâs wonderful PBT keycaps. The caps feature sub-legends on the front side, so users can easily keep track of which keyboard functions are set to different layers by default. The keyboardâs lighting is even set by default to highlight layered keys when the FN button is pressed.

The Huntsman Mini is as easy as 60 percent boards get. Everything is explained, layer functions are clear and concise, and thereâs no hunting and pecking for important keys. Itâs great to see another major keyboard maker embracing the smaller form factor, especially one as gaming-centric as Razer.

The keyboard is one of the most important tools in our daily lives. We work on it. We play on it. We write questionable Twitter messages with it. But just because itâs massively important doesnât mean it has to be massive. We small keyboard users get on just fine, and now Razerâs making more of us.