These two keyboards represent genuinely different philosophies that happen to land in a similar price bracket. The Ducky One 3 is a wired-only gaming keyboard built around minimal latency and Cherry MX switch quality; the Keychron K8 is a wireless-capable all-rounder built around QMK/VIA firmware and broad device compatibility. The “better” choice depends heavily on whether you’re optimizing for gaming responsiveness or daily flexibility.
Who This Comparison Is For
- Buyers deciding between a dedicated wired gaming keyboard and a flexible wireless all-rounder
- Anyone weighing raw input latency against multi-device Bluetooth convenience
- Typists and gamers trying to figure out which keyboard better serves both use cases at once
Side-by-Side Spec Comparison
| Spec | Ducky One 3 | Keychron K8 (Pro/Wireless variants) |
|---|---|---|
| Connectivity | Wired only | Bluetooth 5.1 (up to 3 devices) + wired USB-C |
| Latency | Significantly lower than the Keychron — better suited to gaming | Higher latency over Bluetooth; wired mode narrows the gap |
| Layout | 60%, TKL, 75%, 98% (no low-profile option) | TKL primarily, with broader layout variety across the full K-series |
| Switches | Cherry MX (various types), hot-swappable | Gateron G Pro (smooth, tactile), hot-swappable on Pro variants |
| Keycaps | High-density PBT, tripleshot on some variants | Double-shot ABS (standard) or PBT (K8 Pro) |
| Sound dampening | Ducky’s proprietary “Quack Mechanics” dampening | Dense damping foam (K8 Pro) |
| Software/firmware | None — no companion app, no QMK/VIA | Open-source QMK/VIA support (Pro variants) |
| Battery life (wireless models) | N/A — wired only | Up to 240 hours claimed; roughly a week of regular use with backlight off in hands-on testing |
| Mac/Windows support | Standard | Dedicated switch for Mac/Windows modifier layouts |
| Price | Typically $90–110 | Typically $70–100 depending on variant |
Note: both lineups include multiple variants (sizes, switch options, Pro vs. standard) — confirm the exact model and specs before buying, since features vary across the line.
Gaming Performance: Ducky’s Clear Advantage
This is the most decisive, independently verified difference between these two keyboards. RTINGS’ direct side-by-side testing concluded plainly: “The Ducky is wired-only and has much lower latency than the Keychrons, making it better suited to gaming.” This isn’t a marginal edge — wired-only design inherently avoids the latency overhead that Bluetooth connections introduce, and the One 3’s focus on minimal input delay reflects Ducky’s gaming-first heritage as a brand. If competitive gaming responsiveness is your top priority, this is a meaningful, measurable factor in Ducky’s favor, not just a brand reputation claim.
The trade-off is exactly what you’d expect: the K8’s Bluetooth connectivity, while convenient, runs at higher latency than 2.4GHz or wired connections generally, since Bluetooth is “preferred for convenience” rather than competitive responsiveness. If you specifically game over Bluetooth on the K8, you’re accepting a real latency cost in exchange for cable-free flexibility — using the K8 in wired mode narrows this gap considerably, but the underlying hardware latency difference remains in Ducky’s favor regardless of connection type.
Typing Feel and Sound
This is more genuinely competitive ground between the two. One detailed independent comparison testing the typing sound and feel of the Ducky One 3, Keychron K8, and a third competitor found the One 3 “really wowed” the tester, specifically highlighting “extremely pleasant” typing noise and praising the keyboard’s overall finish despite its high proportion of plastic — crediting Ducky’s proprietary “Quack Mechanics” dampening as a likely factor. The One 3 also offers genuinely premium PBT keycaps, described as extremely high-quality, with full switch and keycap swappability.
The Keychron K8 (particularly the Pro variant) counters with its own strong typing credentials — independent hands-on testing specifically praised the Gateron G Pro switches as “smooth and tactile,” the dense damping foam for quieter performance, and noted a clear preference for the K8 Pro’s PBT keycaps over the non-Pro variant’s double-shot ABS, even though the PBT version isn’t shine-through. Neither keyboard is a clear loser here — both deliver genuinely well-regarded typing experiences, with the Ducky perhaps having a very slight edge in pure acoustic refinement according to that specific side-by-side test.
Software and Customization: Keychron’s Decisive Win
This is where the K8 pulls clearly ahead, and it’s a real practical consideration beyond just typing feel. The Ducky One 3 ships without any companion software at all, which one reviewer specifically flagged as “a pity,” since it “unnecessarily complicates the configuration and saving of macros.” If you want to remap keys or build custom macros, you’re more limited on the Ducky side.
The Keychron K8 Pro, by contrast, supports open-source QMK firmware and VIA software, enabling genuine remapping, layer customization, and macro creation without proprietary lock-in. If software-level customization matters to your workflow — whether for gaming macros or general productivity — this is a clear, decisive advantage for Keychron.
Connectivity and Multi-Device Use: Keychron’s Other Strength
The K8’s Bluetooth 5.1 connectivity supports pairing with up to three devices, with hands-on testing confirming quick, stable switching between an iPad, a Surface, and a MacBook Pro. A hardware switch lets you toggle between Mac and Windows modifier key layouts, making the K8 genuinely practical for anyone who splits time across multiple machines or operating systems. The Ducky One 3’s wired-only design means none of this applies — it’s built to live on one desk, connected to one system, optimized for that single use case rather than flexibility across devices.
Battery Life (Where Applicable)
Since the One 3 is wired-only, battery life isn’t a consideration at all. The Keychron K8’s wireless variants claim up to 240 hours, and hands-on testing found this held up in practice — about a week of regular use with the backlight off, and a full long workday with the backlight on full brightness. One practical tip from that same testing: the K8’s default auto-sleep mode occasionally caused sluggish Bluetooth reconnection, and disabling it improved responsiveness without a noticeable battery life penalty — worth doing if you experience the same issue.
Final Verdict: Which Wins?
Choose the Ducky One 3 if: gaming performance and minimal input latency are your top priority, you’re comfortable with a single wired connection to one desk, and you don’t mind the lack of companion software for remapping and macros.
Choose the Keychron K8 if: you want wireless flexibility across multiple devices, value open-source QMK/VIA customization, or split your time between gaming and general productivity work where Bluetooth convenience matters more than shaving every millisecond of input latency.
If you genuinely need both excellent gaming performance and software customization in one keyboard, it’s worth looking at Keychron’s own Q-series (the Q1, in particular, has been specifically praised as “the most pleasant to use in every respect” among more than 25 keyboards tested by one reviewer) — though that moves you into a different, generally pricier tier than either keyboard covered in this comparison.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which keyboard is better for competitive gaming specifically? The Ducky One 3, according to direct independent latency testing — its wired-only design delivers measurably lower input latency than the Keychron K8’s Bluetooth connectivity, making it the better-suited option for competitive play specifically.
Does the Keychron K8 have a version with QMK/VIA support? Yes — the K8 Pro variant supports open-source QMK firmware and VIA software for key remapping and macros. The standard (non-Pro) K8 doesn’t include this software-level customization.
Is the lack of software on the Ducky One 3 a dealbreaker? It depends on your needs. If you don’t need to remap keys or build complex macros, the lack of companion software is a non-issue. If customization matters to your workflow, this is a genuine limitation worth weighing against the Ducky’s gaming-latency advantage.
Can I use the Keychron K8 for gaming if I connect it via wired USB-C instead of Bluetooth? Yes — using the K8 in wired mode significantly narrows the latency gap with the Ducky One 3, since you’re avoiding Bluetooth’s inherent connection overhead entirely. The Ducky’s hardware-level latency advantage may still hold a slight edge, but the practical gap shrinks considerably in wired mode.
Which keyboard has better build quality? Both are well-regarded, but in different ways — the Ducky One 3 impressed one detailed reviewer with its finish despite a high proportion of plastic and its premium PBT keycaps, while the Keychron K8 Pro stands out for its damping foam and switch quality. Neither is a clear loser on build quality; the differences are more about feel and finish than raw construction quality.
