By: Alex Mercer – SeaPRwire – The biggest problem with modern keyboards is not a lack of features. It is feature overload. Walk through any enthusiast forum and you’ll find keyboards packed with knobs, screens, layers of RGB effects, and endless marketing claims. Yet many users still spend eight hours a day moving their fingers across layouts that were designed for typewriters. That is what makes the new Epomaker Hack70 interesting. Instead of adding more, it removes assumptions that have shaped keyboard design for decades.

The official announcement centers on a compact 65-key ortholinear layout. Every key sits in straight rows and columns rather than the staggered arrangement found on traditional keyboards. On paper, the goal is simple. Reduce lateral finger movement. Shorten travel distance. Lower fatigue during long typing sessions. The split spacebar takes the idea further by turning one of the largest keys on the board into two independently programmable inputs. Combined with VIA support, users can remap every key, create macros, and build workflow-specific layers. The facts are straightforward. Epomaker is offering a keyboard that prioritizes efficiency and customization over familiarity.
The more interesting story sits beneath the specifications. Ortholinear keyboards have long occupied a niche corner of the mechanical keyboard market. Many users admire the concept but hesitate to leave behind decades of muscle memory. The Hack70 appears to be an attempt to bridge that gap. The gasket-mounted structure, pre-lubed switches, hot-swappable sockets, XDA-profile PBT keycaps, and adjustable stand are not revolutionary on their own. Together, they soften the learning curve. Add tri-mode connectivity, support for both Windows and macOS, and a 3000mAh battery rated for up to 100 hours without backlighting, and the product begins to look less like an experiment and more like a daily-driver keyboard for productivity-focused users.
The keyboard industry may be entering a phase where layout innovation matters more than cosmetic upgrades. Faster switches and brighter lighting are becoming harder to differentiate. Workflow efficiency remains an open frontier. Epomaker’s Hack70 will not appeal to everyone. Ortholinear layouts never do. Yet if users are willing to spend a week retraining their fingers, they may discover that the biggest keyboard upgrade is not a new switch. It is a new way of typing.
Author bio: Alex Mercer, a veteran technology director and hardware analyst who has spent years evaluating input devices, computing ergonomics, and productivity-focused technology trends across the global PC industry.