Arbiter Studio Polar 75 Pro Review: Wooting who?

Arbiter Studio Polar 75 Pro Review: Wooting who?

August 27, 2024


Another day, another magnetic gaming keyboard. But Arbiter Studio’s latest release — the KITSUNE Polar 75 Pro — is not just any magnetic gaming keyboard. It’s an amazing magnetic gaming keyboard that sounds fantastic, feels great, and has features like “Snap Tap” (SOCD), which is, some have argued, so good in certain games that it’s basically cheating. 

The Polar 75 Pro is a wired mechanical gaming keyboard with magnetic Hall Effect switches (Arbiter-exclusive Fuji Pro), a new PCB design that separates the LEDs from the Hall sensors to deliver a “2x boost in performance by lowering input latency and increasing Rapid Trigger accuracy,” and high-quality dye-sub PBT keycaps in Arbiter’s own AOP profile. It’s a great-sounding, great-feeling keyboard for both gaming and typing, and it’s surprisingly budget-friendly: $165 alone or $175 bundled with a memory foam wristrest.

Design and Construction of the Polar 75 Pro

Although the KITSUNE Polar 75 Pro doesn’t immediately look like it deviates too much from the brand’s Polar 65, we reviewed earlier this year, the keyboard actually has quite a few design tweaks — it’s not just a 75-percent version of the Polar 65. The Polar 75 Pro comes in one color: black, with white keycaps (and black accent keys). Like the Polar 65, the Polar 75 Pro sports a CNC aluminum frame with a black matte anodized finish over a semi-translucent plastic case.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

The Polar 75 Pro comes with dye-sub PBT keycaps in the brand’s new AOP (Arbiter Original Profile) profile, which is lower overall, and has more aggressively-sculpted rows, than the KOP profile keycaps seen on the Polar 65. The AOP keycaps also have a wider surface area and 1.5mm-thick walls for an even more premium feel. The keycaps are white with black printed legends, and the keyboard comes with two black accent keys (Enter and Esc) installed. The box includes three extra keycaps: white Enter and Escape keys for those who don’t like the accent key aesthetic, and an alternate Spacebar with a more understated geometric design (vs. the default Spacebar’s oversized ’75’).



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