The Wooting 60HE V2 meets
the MonsGeek Fun 60 Ultra TMR
The competitive benchmark with the best software in keyboards. We tested it head-to-head against the MonsGeek Fun 60 Ultra TMR ($80) across 4 key dimensions.
Wooting 60HE V2
“The competitive benchmark with the best software in keyboards”
Head-to-Head Breakdown
Strengths & Weaknesses
Wooting 60HE V2
- Wutility software is the best in keyboards, web-based, no drivers, one-click pro profile sharing (Consumer Tech Review, Wasabi)
- True 8K Hz polling with Tachyon mode; optimum measured it 5ms faster than the Fun 60 Ultra with a high-speed camera
- Sounds like a custom-tuned board out of the box, friction-fit mount, dense silicone dampening, pre-lubed switches (optimum)
- Massive 'Wooting tax'. $35 boards deliver 60-70% of the same gaming performance (optimum, Hipyo Tech)
- Base $180 model ships in cheap-feeling ABS plastic; aluminum upgrade costs $240 total (Hipyo Tech)
- 60% layout with no arrow keys or F-row forces heavy function layer usage (Hipyo Tech, Wasabi)
MonsGeek Fun 60 Ultra TMR
- TMR sensors register 0.01mm rapid trigger. 10x more precise than Wooting's Hall Effect sensors (techless)
- Hot-swap between magnetic gaming switches AND standard mechanical switches on the same board (techless, Hipyo Tech)
- 8K Hz polling, aluminum case, and tri-mode wireless for under $80, insane price-to-performance (optimum)
- Software is a 'nightmare to use', requires driver install, bugged profiles, calibration breaks in wireless mode (techless, Hipyo Tech)
- Sounds and feels 'pretty bad' out of the box; needs tape mods and switch swaps to sound decent (Hipyo Tech)
- Blatantly copies Wooting's strap design; included keycaps are 'pretty crappy' shine-through caps (Hipyo Tech)
The Verdict
Our Bottom Line
The Wooting 60HE V2 won because of one thing that separates it from every competitor: Wutility. Consumer Tech Review calls it "the best software in the entire industry." You open a browser tab, plug in the board, and within 30 seconds you're adjusting actuation points, mapping macros, or copy-pasting a pro player's Valorant profile. No downloads, no drivers, no accounts. Every other keyboard on this list makes software feel like homework.
Wooting 60HE V2
The Wooting 60HE V2 won because of one thing that separates it from every competitor: Wutility. Consumer Tech Review calls it "the best software in the entire industry." You open a browser tab, plug in the board, and within 30 seconds you're adjusting actuation points, mapping macros, or copy-pasting a pro player's Valorant profile. No downloads, no drivers, no accounts. Every other keyboard on this list makes software feel like homework.
- You play competitive FPS games and want the lowest possible input latency
- Software matters to you, easy profile sharing, constant updates, and a clean web UI
- You want a keyboard that sounds premium out of the box without any modding
- You're willing to invest $180-240 for a proven, well-supported product with a 4-year warranty
- You prefer a compact 60% layout to maximize mouse space on your desk
MonsGeek Fun 60 Ultra TMR
The Fun 60 Ultra TMR exists to prove that elite gaming performance doesn't require elite spending. Techless ran precision tests with a height gauge and found that the TMR sensors register key releases at just 0.01mm of movement. The Wooting's Hall Effect sensors need 0.1mm, ten times the distance. In raw sensor precision, the $80 board beat the $180 one.
- You're budget-conscious but still want elite-level rapid trigger precision for competitive play
- You want to hot-swap between magnetic gaming switches and standard mechanical switches on one board
- You're comfortable with clunky software and don't mind wrestling with buggy configuration tools
- You plan to mod the board anyway, new keycaps, tape mod, switch swaps, and don't care about stock aesthetics
- You play games that reward extreme rapid trigger sensitivity like osu! or movement-heavy FPS titles