Epomaker rt98 mechanical keyboard modular numpad review – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

Hey number pad lovers, this is a keyboard we can finally agree on

The Epomaker RT98 is a retro-looking mechanical keyboard you can customize in many ways — including its numpad position.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

268621_Epomaker_RT98_mechanical_keyboard_review_ADiBenedetto_0049
268621_Epomaker_RT98_mechanical_keyboard_review_ADiBenedetto_0049
I’m right-hand dominant but a lefty at heart.
| Photo: Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
is a reviewer covering laptops and the occasional gadget. He spent over 15 years in the photography industry before joining The Verge as a deals writer in 2021.

I know a vocal group of people who swear by the number pad on their keyboard. And yet, for years I haven’t cared about using one — until I put my hands on the Epomaker RT98. It’s a mechanical keyboard with a charming retro aesthetic, a fun CRT-like screen, VIA compatibility, a nice typing feel, and most importantly, a modular number pad that can be moved to either side. It’s a clever compromise in a budget friendly-ish board, allowing you to further customize your setup without losing the functionality of the coveted “tenkey.”

But like many mechanical keyboards out there, it’s got some unique quirks and tradeoffs.

7

Verge Score

$119

The Good

  • Ambidextrous number pad
  • Nice-feeling and -sounding silent switches
  • Even nicer creamy switches
  • Magnetic CRT-style screen is silly but fun

The Bad

  • Plasticky build
  • Moving the number pad is a slightly fiddly process
  • Printed legends on the keycaps look low-quality and not sharp
  • Around the starting price of nicer aluminum keyboards

The RT98 is Epomaker’s most recently crowdfunded mechanical keyboard, costing $119 for a prebuilt model configured with either the brand’s own Creamy Jade linear switches or Sea Salt Silent V2 linears. You can also choose to have your number pad on the right or the left when it ships to you, but being modular, this is something you can change on your own.

Southpaw keyboards with left-handed numpads aren’t new (Keychron has made them easily accessible for years), but this keyboard’s switch-hitter status is rare. There were a couple of old Asus ROG Claymores and the Mountain Everest Max with swappable / removable number pads, but they were costly and garish gaming keyboards. The Epomaker RT98 is much more understated and charming.

A little before and after. Left: The RT98 in right-hand numpad orientation. Right: Southpaw mode.

To fully test the RT98, I started off using it in right-handed mode with silent switches before moving the numpad to the left and swapping to the Creamy Jades. The typing experiences from both switches are solid. The RT98 is designed with the same hallmarks of most modern enthusiast keyboards: an internal gasket mounted design with layers of foam under the PCB to give the typing acoustics a fuller sound — even in a plastic chassis. It uses a solid PCB and polycarbonate switch plate without any flex cuts (cutouts allowing the whole board to flex under pressure). This makes the RT98 feel a touch sharper compared to other boards that have a pillowy bounce to their typing.

Here's what typing sounds like on the Epomaker RT98 with Epomaker Sea Salt Silent V2 linear switches:

Whether you pick the RT98 with silent or creamy switches, you’re in for a fine typing experience that sounds nice. The Sea Salt Silent V2 linears have a smooth quietness to them, though that’s slightly betrayed by the louder plate-mounted stabilizers in the space bar, enter, shift, and backspace keys. It’s a fine setup for not bothering a desk neighbor or disrupting a video call with your on-the-down-low typing, but the Dry Studio ATM 98 I recently reviewed (while much pricier) is a better-sounding silent board with much nicer keycaps. Epomaker’s included PBT keycap set has nice beige nostalgia vibes, but their dye-sub printed legends look cheap and not very crisp.

Here's what typing sounds like on the Epomaker RT98 with Epomaker Creamy Jade linear switches:

The RT98 is an absolute treat when you use it with Epomaker’s Creamy Jade linears, delivering a crisp, marbley tone that’s always pleasant. When I hear “creamy” I think of the super popular F75 and similar boards from Aula, a brand that collaborates with Epomaker on some keyboards. The F-series has a bit of that sought-after raindrops-on-a-window tone. The RT98 and its Creamy Jades play in that ballpark but have a richer, darker tone than the F75 Max I’ve briefly used. I prefer the Epomaker.

The typing and acoustics are very good here, but the main draw of the RT98 is that modular number pad. I don’t work in data entry, so typing the occasional digits on the number row is fine by me. But I don’t mind the idea of having a numpad off to my left and out of the way of my mouse hand, which I can always do with a dedicated wireless pad. So I was excited to use the RT98 in a southpaw layout.

<em>The RT98 comes with a simple nylon-wrapped USB cable, a small hex wrench, a couple spare switches, and alternate Mac keys.</em>
<em>The eight case screws are easily accessible.</em>
<em>Epomaker only includes a basic quick start guide and these QR codes, but none of them lead you to instructions on moving the number pad.</em>
<em>After removing the screws, I pulled off the numpad’s part of the case.</em>
<em>Lifting up the numpad reveals its flexible ribbon cable that you have to disconnect.</em>
<em>The numpad PCB has two symmetrical connectors for its ribbon cable.</em>
<em>A glimpse at the foam sandwich and gaskets under the numpad.</em>
<em>The numpad removed.</em>
<em>You have to be slightly careful when lifting up the main case, as the wiring for the screen needs to be disconnected before you pull it away.</em>
<em>Once that’s disconnected, you’re free and clear.</em>
<em>Epomaker’s video instructions tell you unplug the mainboard and batteries, but there’s really no need to if you’re just shifting things over.</em>
<em>The number pad’s ribbon cable.</em>
<em>Another glimpse at the gaskets, foam, PCB, and switch plate, now for the main section of the keyboard.</em>
<em>The ribbon cable now on the left side.</em>
<em>The main keyboard portion slots into the right side of the tray without issues.</em>
<em>Reconnecting the ribbon cable.</em>
<em>The southpaw has landed.</em>
<em>Reconnecting the cable for the screen. I wish Epomaker used internal magnetic pogo pins like the Meletrix Zoom75 Tiga, but that’s a much more expensive keyboard.</em>
<em>Main case back on. Its internal clips were not fun to push in, but they worked.</em>
<em>And now the numpad case back on, on the left side.</em>
<em>I put all the case screws back in, but I gave up on moving those rubber spacers to their new screw holes. They were too much of a pain to get in, and they don’t seem necessary.</em>
Removing the keycaps to switch out the Sea Salt V2 Silents for the Creamy Jades.
<em>Down to the bare bones (mostly).</em>
<em>I enlisted some help to connect the Creamy Jades. (Sorry for any jump scare.)</em>
<em>Looking good and creamy.</em>
1/25
The RT98 comes with a simple nylon-wrapped USB cable, a small hex wrench, a couple spare switches, and alternate Mac keys.

Changing the position involves removing the bottom screws, popping off the top cases from both the main section and numpad, swapping the internals, and reattaching everything. It’s not the most labor-intensive process, but you do have to temporarily unplug the cable for the detachable screen’s pogo pin connectors and reposition the numpad’s ribbon cable. I couldn’t find instructions in the box on doing this, but I found Epomaker’s step-by-step video tutorial and had it all done in about 30 minutes. I’m always slightly worried about messing up ribbon cables, but the process — while fiddly — was easy enough. But it did reveal an uncomfortable weakness: Prying this plastic thing open and pressing its clips back into place was nerve-wracking. I’d love to see this board made with metal.

I imagine most people will likely buy the RT98 in the numpad orientation they prefer and just leave it that way. Or, like me, change it only once. But there is something cool about not being locked into one form of 1800-layout board. Part of the fun of mechanical keyboards is how customizable they are, from the keycaps and switches to the stabilizers and down-the-rabbit-hole modifications you can make — especially if you’re an enthusiast who just mixes things up once in a while to feel alive.

<em>The RT98 does have a nice retro aesthetic, as its name implies.</em>
<em>Standard 1800 layout.</em>
<em>The magnetic screen comes preloaded with three silly cat GIFs: Two are animated, and one is a real clip of a hand petting a cat.</em>
<em>There’s a touch of the popular <a href="https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=102259.0" target="_blank">GMK 9009</a> keycap set in these colors (which is often imitated), based off the vintage Cherry G80-9009 keyboard.</em>
<em>Why a CRT-like screen? Retro!</em>
<em>These keycaps are mostly fine, but the printing should be sharper.</em>
<em>Epomaker’s logo has never looked so vintage.</em>
<em>I love that Epomaker puts a storage slot for its USB dongles on its keyboards. Other keyboards have come up with more elegant hiding spots, but this works.</em>
<em>I never use the feet, but the RT98 has two of them for a total of three typing angles.</em>
<em>No feet.</em>
<em>Little foot.</em>
<em>Big foot.</em>
<em>Get out of here, righties.</em>
<em>Let’s go leftists.</em>
<em>The southpaw orientation can often look jarring, but you get used to it.</em>
<em>The date, time, and status screen — before I synced the time with my system clock.</em>
<em>Ned Flanders wishes he had this keyboard.</em>
<em>Another thing you get used to with a southpaw keyboard: reaching for the escape key and feeling that the keyboard keeps going beyond that. A small thing, but a little weird at first.</em>
<em>The screen also has a “typing mode” that quickly flashes what keys you hit on it, like a key tester.</em>
<em>I’m convinced that if you get used to using a numpad with your left hand and keeping your mouse closer to center you won’t want to go back.</em>
1/20
The RT98 does have a nice retro aesthetic, as its name implies.

The RT98’s silly little detachable screen is another way to have some customizable fun. It can show the date, time, and connection statuses or loop some built-in cat GIFs. Connecting the keyboard to Epomaker’s web-based driver allows you to sync its clock and customize the three GIFs. It was easy enough to load up some silly GIFs of my own and watch them endlessly loop. There’s not much other use for this CRT-like keyboard screen, but it’s fun. The magnetic nature of it would be more useful if Epomaker creates an ecosystem of attachable accessories, but company reps never replied to our questions asking if that might be in the cards.

<em>Give me a screen for GIFs on a keyboard and I’m absolutely going to upload silly anime clips to it.</em>
<em>Here’s Epomaker’s interface for customizing the RT98’s screen. It’s simple but effective.</em>
1/2
Give me a screen for GIFs on a keyboard and I’m absolutely going to upload silly anime clips to it.

The RT98 is a very good keyboard with a cool and unique hook. But it costs anywhere from $40 to $60 more than various Aula or other entry-level boards, and its build quality is only a tad nicer. For $119, you’re around the starting price of fancier keyboards with aluminum cases. It’s just $10 shy of something like the Wobkey Rainy75, which also includes much nicer keycaps. You have to really want the modular numpad and retro vibes of the RT98.

There are so many mechanical keyboards out there, and between various sizes, layouts, and optional number pads and macro pads, you can arrange your workspace in limitless ways. The Epomaker RT98 is just another cool option with yet one more way to customize how you use it. It’s a fun thing to tinker with and enjoy, even if you’re likely to just set it and forget it.

Photography by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.