The Apex Pro Mini is the premium analog gaming alternative to the Wooting, built around OmniPoint adjustable Hall-effect switches with up to 37 actuation levels per key plus rapid trigger. Tom's Hardware called it a fantastic gaming keyboard and an easy recommendation for a competitive edge, while noting casual or budget gamers should look elsewhere. The trade-offs are a steep learning curve, a high price, and latency that trails the Wooting 60HE v2.

Full review
Gaming Performance
The Apex Pro Mini brought adjustable Hall-effect switches to a 60% board, and gaming is where it shines. Tom's Guide declared that nothing comes close to the sheer gaming responsiveness of the Apex Pro Mini, largely thanks to the OmniPoint switches and the ability to set rapid actuation on every key. The OmniPoint 2.0 switches adjust from 0.2mm to 3.8mm across 37 levels, and rapid trigger plus dual-action keypresses let a single key do two jobs at different depths.
Tom's Hardware called it a fantastic keyboard for gaming and an easy recommendation for a competitive edge, particularly for its rapid trigger and onboard profiles. The one caveat is that in direct latency comparisons the Wooting 60HE v2 measured faster and supports higher 8 kHz polling, so the Apex Pro Mini is the close second in pure responsiveness rather than the outright leader.
Build Quality and Design
The Apex Pro Mini pairs a premium aluminum top plate with PBT doubleshot keycaps that are fadeproof and durable, giving it a solid, dense feel in the hand. RTINGS described it as delivering a premium feel without adding unnecessary complexity to the physical design, even as the feature set runs deep. It is a well-made board that looks and feels the part of a flagship.
Like every board here it is a 60% layout, so dedicated arrow and navigation keys move to layered functions. The wired model connects over USB-C, and SteelSeries also sells a wireless variant with Bluetooth and a 2.4GHz dongle, an option the Wooting 60HE v2 and Ducky One 3 Mini do not offer, which is a genuine differentiator for a gamer who wants a clean desk.
Switches and Software
The OmniPoint Hall-effect switches are the centerpiece, and the SteelSeries GG software is how you wield them. You can adjust actuation per key or in bulk, set rapid trigger sensitivity, and configure dual-action bindings, all from the app. The flexibility rivals the Wooting's Wootility, though reviewers generally rate Wootility as the more polished software experience.
The depth comes with a learning curve. Tom's Hardware noted the board packs in lots of features, perhaps too much, with a steep learning curve, and explicitly said budget-conscious or casual gamers should look elsewhere for a cheaper alternative. For a player willing to invest the time, the per-key tuning is genuinely powerful; for someone who just wants to plug in and play, it is overkill.
Connectivity and Versions
One of the Apex Pro Mini's clearest advantages over the Wooting 60HE v2 is choice of connectivity. The standard model is wired USB-C, but the Apex Pro Mini Wireless adds lag-minimized 2.4GHz and Bluetooth, letting it roam between a gaming PC and a laptop or tablet. That flexibility, paired with the analog switches, is a combination none of the other gaming-focused boards here match.
The wireless freedom does come at a price premium on top of an already expensive board, and competitive purists will still hardwire for the lowest possible latency. But for a gamer who values both top-tier responsiveness and the option to go untethered, the Apex Pro Mini occupies a niche the Wooting and Ducky leave open.
Where It Falls Short
The Apex Pro Mini's main drawbacks are price and complexity. It is one of the more expensive boards in this group, especially the wireless version, and Tom's Hardware was direct that casual and budget gamers should look elsewhere. The feature depth that makes it powerful also makes it intimidating, with a steep learning curve in the GG software.
On pure performance it is also edged by the Wooting 60HE v2, which measured lower latency and offers 8 kHz polling. And as an analog gaming board it is not the typing-focused choice; the Ducky One 3 Mini delivers a more refined out-of-box mechanical typing experience for less money. The Apex Pro Mini is for the gamer who specifically wants adjustable analog actuation plus wireless options.
Who It's Best For
Choose the Apex Pro Mini if you want adjustable Hall-effect actuation and rapid trigger for competitive gaming, value the option of going wireless, and are invested in the SteelSeries ecosystem. Tom's Guide's verdict that nothing matches its gaming responsiveness, paired with the wireless option, makes it the most flexible high-performance pick here.
Look elsewhere if budget matters, where the HyperX Alloy Origins 60 and Royal Kludge RK61 are far cheaper, or if you want the absolute lowest latency, where the Wooting 60HE v2 leads. If typing feel is your priority rather than gaming, the Ducky One 3 Mini is the better choice. The Apex Pro Mini is the premium analog-plus-wireless gaming option.
Strengths
- +OmniPoint adjustable Hall-effect switches with up to 37 actuation levels per key
- +Rapid trigger and dual-action keypresses for competitive gaming
- +Premium aluminum top plate and PBT doubleshot keycaps
- +Wired and wireless (Bluetooth + 2.4GHz) versions available
- +SteelSeries GG software allows per-key actuation tuning
Watch-outs
- −Steep learning curve for its many features
- −Expensive, especially the wireless model
- −Tom's Hardware notes budget or casual gamers should look elsewhere
- −Measured gaming latency trails the Wooting 60HE v2
How it compares
The premium analog alternative to the Wooting 60HE v2. Both use Hall-effect switches with rapid trigger and adjustable actuation, but the Wooting 60HE v2 measured lower latency and offers 8 kHz polling, while the Apex Pro Mini counters with optional wireless. It is far more gaming-focused than the typing-oriented Ducky One 3 Mini and pricier than the HyperX Alloy Origins 60 or Royal Kludge RK61.
Who this is for
At a glance: gamers who want analog adjustable actuation with the option of wireless and SteelSeries' ecosystem.
Why you’d buy the SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini
- OmniPoint adjustable Hall-effect switches with up to 37 actuation levels per key.
- Rapid trigger and dual-action keypresses for competitive gaming.
- Premium aluminum top plate and PBT doubleshot keycaps.
Why you’d skip it
- Steep learning curve for its many features.
- Expensive, especially the wireless model.
- Tom's Hardware notes budget or casual gamers should look elsewhere.
Rating sources
“a fantastic keyboard for gaming and an easy recommendation if you are looking for a competitive edge, particularly thanks to its Rapid Trigger functionality”
“easily one of the best 60% gaming keyboards, delivering a premium feel without adding unnecessary complexity”
“nothing comes close to the sheer gaming responsiveness of the Apex Pro Mini”
Our 4.5 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



