Verdict
Head-to-head · Best 60% Mechanical Keyboards

Ducky One 3 Mini vs Royal Kludge RK61

Which is the better buy? Side-by-side on rating, price, strengths, and watch-outs — with the published ratings we averaged to get there.

The short answer

Ducky One 3 Mini comes out ahead by a clear margin (4.7 vs 4.2). The gap is mostly about keyboard enthusiasts and typists who want the best out-of-box mechanical feel, sound, and hot-swap flexibility in a 60% — read the strengths below before deciding.

Ducky One 3 Mini
Higher ratedRanked #2 in Best 60% Mechanical Keyboards
Ducky One 3 Mini
$109as of May 26

The One 3 Mini is the enthusiast typing pick: ProSettings scored it 4.5/5 and Tom's Hardware called it a solid keyboard built around Ducky's QUACK Mechanics dampening, factory-lubed stabilizers, a hot-swap PCB, and PBT doubleshot keycaps. It delivers the best out-of-box typing sound and feel in this group. The compromises are a slightly flexy plastic case, wired-only connectivity, and no analog gaming tricks.

Strengths
  • ProSettings rated it 4.5/5, calling it everything you'd want from a mass-produced keyboard
  • Factory-lubed V2 stabilizers among the best tested in stock form
  • Hot-swappable PCB accepts 3-pin and 5-pin switches with Cherry, Kailh, or Gateron options
Watch-outs
  • Plastic case flexes slightly under hand pressure
  • 60% layout drops dedicated arrow and navigation keys
  • Wired only, no Bluetooth or 2.4GHz wireless
Royal Kludge RK61
Ranked #5 in Best 60% Mechanical Keyboards
Royal Kludge RK61
$56.99as of May 29

The RK61 is the budget pick, repeatedly called the best budget 60% keyboard by Switch and Click and other reviewers for packing triple-mode wireless, a hot-swap PCB, and a sturdy build at a fraction of the others' price. The compromises are predictable: ABS keycaps that shine over time, slightly rattly stabilizers, and house-brand switches that fall short of Cherry MX. For the money, the value is hard to beat.

Strengths
  • Widely cited as the best budget 60% keyboard, with features far above its price
  • Triple-mode connectivity: Bluetooth, 2.4GHz wireless, and wired USB-C
  • Hot-swappable PCB accepts 3-pin and 5-pin switches
Watch-outs
  • ABS keycaps shine and wear faster than PBT rivals
  • Stabilizers are a little rattly out of the box
  • RK-branded switches are not as refined as Cherry MX

How they stack up

Ducky One 3 Mini

The enthusiast typing pick. Its factory-lubed stabilizers and QUACK Mechanics dampening give a better out-of-box typing sound than the Royal Kludge RK61, HyperX Alloy Origins 60, or even the gaming-focused Wooting 60HE v2 and SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini. It trades away the analog rapid-trigger gaming performance of the Wooting 60HE v2 and SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini for that traditional mechanical experience.

Royal Kludge RK61

The budget pick. It costs a fraction of the Wooting 60HE v2, SteelSeries Apex Pro Mini, Ducky One 3 Mini, or HyperX Alloy Origins 60, yet adds triple-mode wireless that even the wired Ducky One 3 Mini and Wooting 60HE v2 lack. Its hot-swap PCB matches the Ducky One 3 Mini, but its ABS keycaps and rattly stabilizers fall short of the Ducky One 3 Mini's PBT caps and lubed stabilizers.

Specs side-by-side

SpecDucky One 3 MiniRoyal Kludge RK61
Layout60% (61-key)60% (61-key)
SwitchesCherry MX Red (hot-swap, 3/5-pin)RK Red linear (hot-swap, 3/5-pin)
KeycapsPBT doubleshotABS
StabilizersFactory-lubed Ducky V2
DampeningSilicone plate + EVA foam
Polling Rate1000 Hz
ConnectionWired USB-C (detachable)Bluetooth + 2.4GHz + wired USB-C
Onboard ProfilesYes, macro support
BacklightRGB
BatteryBuilt-in rechargeable
CompatibilityWindows / macOS / Android
SoftwareRK programmable
← See the full ranking of best 60% mechanical keyboards