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Asus’ ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless has been at the top of our best wireless gaming keyboards list for a while, and it’s not hard to see why — it’s a well-made, hot-swappable mechanical gaming keyboard with a compact but versatile 96-percent layout and fantastic battery life.
The Strix Morph 96 is a wireless hot-swappable gaming keyboard with a gasket mount design and a compact 96-percent layout. It features bright per-key RGB lighting with lightbars along the sides, a side-mounted customizable rotary knob and button, and three forms of connectivity — 2.4GHz wireless, Bluetooth, and wired (USB-C). It’s available now, and it retails for $139.99.
Design and Construction of the Strix Morph 96
The Strix Morph 96 is a wireless mechanical gaming keyboard with a compact 96-percent layout, which means it has alphanumeric keys, a full set of function keys, arrow keys, a 10-key numberpad, and five navigation keys (Home, Ins, Del, PgUp, and PgDn). It’s got almost as many keys as does a full-size keyboard, but everything is squished together. There’s definitely a learning curve with the cramped layout (I, personally, have never been able to fully get used to the 96-percent layout, even after months and months of using one), but if you don’t mind having your arrow keys practically on top of your punctuation, it can definitely save some desk space.
The Strix Morph 96 measures approximately 15.67 inches (398mm) wide by 5.28 inches (134mm) deep, and is 1.54 inches (39mm) thick at its thickest point, including the keycaps. This is slightly larger than my favorite 96-percent Asus Rog Strix Scope II 96 Wireless, which measures 14.84 x 5.16 x 1.57 inches (377 x 131 x 40mm), but is still smaller than most full-size keyboards. The board weighs just under 2.5 pounds (2.48lbs / 1,125g), which is a little heavier than the Strix Scope II 96 Wireless (2.23lbs / 1,012g) but lighter than the original Asus ROG Azoth (2.61lbs / 1,186g).
The Strix Morph 96 Wireless is a nicely-built board, with a machined aluminum top case in matte gunmetal gray over a black plastic bottom case. The top case has sharp, clean edges and covers the top, front, and back of the board — the sides, which have LED lightstrips, are plastic. Asus’ Republic of Gamers branding is subtle(ish) — for Asus, anyway. “Republic of Gamers” and the ROG eye logo is printed in white on the black spacebar; “Republic of Gamers” is also integrated into the lightbar on the left side (but not the right). On the back of the board, you’ll see a larger ROG eye logo incorporated into the decorative texture.
Okay, it’s not that subtle. But if you want it to be even less subtle, Asus includes three ROG-branded translucent keycaps to replace the Esc key and the two Enter keys (alphanumeric and numpad). It also includes an alternate Ctrl keycap for those who can’t stand the look of the Copilot key.
The Strix Morph 96 Wireless comes with doubleshot ABS keycaps with white printed legends. The keycaps are low profile (Cherry profile, or close), with a lightly textured matte finish and sculpted rows. There are secondary legends printed on the sides of the keycaps for onboard media and lighting control, as well as for macOS users. The keyboard is macOS-friendly and you can easily switch between PC and Mac mode with a keyboard shortcut (Fn + Tab).
The keyboard also has a notched, clickable plastic rotary knob on the left side, near the top. It’s paired with a small square button located right above it, which cycles through the various functions when clicked. The knob is semi-customizable — it comes with three preset functions that you can cycle through out of the box: Volume (click to mute), media track (click to play/pause), and keyboard brightness adjustment (click to set to 100% / 0%). These functions can be turned off in Asus’ new web-based Gear Link app, but they can’t be modified.
There’s also a fourth customizable function, which is set to act as a scroll wheel by default (click for left mouse button functionality). You can change this to perform keyboard, mouse, and multimedia functions, or to quickly access an app or Windows shortcut (though your options are still pretty limited — it can open Copilot or perform about six basic shortcuts, such as copy/paste). This is a little disappointing, as the knob is somewhat unique — there aren’t many left-side knobs. I’m not a big rotary knob person in the first place, but I did find myself using this one to scroll, occasionally. I’d like to see more customizability, however, as the preset functions are ones I won’t use — I map my volume and media controls to my mouse buttons, and I don’t really fiddle with lighting outside of initial setup.
On the back of the keyboard, you’ll find two sets of plastic flip-out feet for adjusting the board’s tilt. Along the top, there’s a USB-C port for charging/wired connectivity, power switch that lets you toggle between 2.4GHz wireless and Bluetooth, and dongle storage for the board’s 2.4GHz wireless USB-A dongle.
In the box, the Strix Morph 96 comes with a handful of accessories, including a 6.5-foot (2m) rubber USB-C to USB-A cable, a USB extender, a 2-in-1 keycap and switch puller, extra translucent accent keycaps, and a torx wrench for opening the case. The keyboard is designed so you can easily open it and tinker around inside — the top case is held on with five screws and the board can be disassembled without flipping it over.
Specs
|
Size |
96% |
|
Switches |
Asus NX Snow V2 (linear) Asus NX Storm V2 (clicky) |
|
Backlighting |
Yes |
|
Onboard Storage |
Yes |
|
Dedicated Media Keys |
Yes (rotary knob) |
|
Game Mode |
Yes |
|
Additional Ports |
0 |
|
Connectivity |
2.4GHz wireless, Bluetooth, wired (USB-C) |
|
Cable |
6.5ft. / 2m, detachable, rubber, USB-C to USB-A |
|
Keycaps |
ABS doubleshot |
|
Construction |
Aluminum top plate |
|
Software |
Gear Link (web-based) |
|
Dimensions (LxWxH) |
15.67 x 5.28 x 1.54 inches / 398 x 134 x 39mm |
|
Weight |
2.48lbs / 1125g |
|
MSRP / Price at Time of Review |
139.99 |
|
Release Date |
March 30, 2026 |
Typing and Gaming Experience on the Strix Morph 96 Wireless
The Strix Morph 96 Wireless comes with your choice of Asus’ NX V2 mechanical switches in Snow V2 (linear) or Storm V2 (clicky). Our review unit came with the Snow V2 (linear) switches, which the brand describes as “refined linear” — factory-lubed linear switches with a 40gf initial force (53gf total force) and an actuation point of 1.8mm. This isn’t the first time I’ve used these switches, and they’re pretty nice for linear switches: Smooth, stable, speedy, and lightweight — perfect for gaming, and surprisingly pleasant for typing.
Like most of Asus’ gaming keyboards today, the Strix Morph 96 Wireless also comes with a hot-swappable PCB that accepts both 3- and 5-pin mechanical switches, so you can swap in your own switches if you don’t find Asus’ options appealing.
Typing on the Strix Morph 96 is a very pleasant experience — more pleasant than I was expecting, and I already had somewhat high expectations given Asus’ track record with gaming keyboards. The linear switches are smooth and lightweight, which, combined with the low-profile, textured keycaps, makes it easy to type quickly for long periods without feeling any fatigue. The keyboard does feature a gasket mount design and a translucent PC positioning plate — it’s comfortable to type on, and it gives off a crisp, clacky sound. There are two layers of dampening material in the case, but case ping was pretty minimal. It wasn’t the most perfect-sounding keyboard I’ve used, but for a relatively budget-friendly mainstream gaming keyboard, it’s impressive.
The NX Snow V2 linear switches are excellent for gaming, as they’re smooth and swift with quick actuation so your fingers can fly across the board without any second guesses (or re-presses). The extra keys in a 96-percent keyboard are also handy for games that need extra keybinds (and it’s not nearly as difficult to get used to the 96-percent layout when you’re gaming, as opposed to touch-typing). This is still a mechanical keyboard, not a magnetic one — while Asus does have some gaming-oriented functionality you can turn on in its Gear Link app, including “Speed Tap,” the brand’s implementation of SOCD, you won’t find Hall Effect-specific features such as RapidTrigger.
Features and Software of the Strix Morph 96 Wireless
The Strix Morph 96 is fully customizable via Asus’ new online app, Gear Link. You can use Gear Link to customize the keyboard without plugging the keyboard in (provided the 2.4GHz dongle is plugged in), which is convenient (and unique — most web-based apps require a wired connection to work). You can use Gear Link to remap keys (though you only get one, limited secondary Fn layer), turn on and adjust Speed Tap, customize the rotary knob and lighting, and adjust the power settings.
It’s not entirely web-based, however. Asus simply cannot stop itself from installing software on your PC — if you’d like to do things like record and setup macros or customize the rotary knob to open up a website or input a preset string of text when you turn/click it, you’ll need to download and install the appropriate Gear Link Companion “extension” app. Gear Link Companion apps are smaller extension apps that let you access more of your device’s functionality, but they need to be installed on your PC (and you do need to restart your PC upon installation). So close, Asus… so close.
The Strix Morph 96 Wireless offers three forms of connectivity: 2.4GHz wireless, Bluetooth, and wired (via USB-C). Asus rates the board’s battery life at 590 hours over a 2.4GHz wireless connection with the lighting turned off; that number drops to around 100 hours with the lighting turned on. In Bluetooth mode, the battery is rated for about 750 hours with the lighting turned off (110 hours with the lighting turned on). This isn’t quite as impressive as the Asus Strix Scope II 96 Wireless, which gets 1,500 hours of battery life over a 2.4GHz wireless connection with the lighting turned off (90 hours with the lighting turned on, though, so it seems like the Strix Morph 96 Wireless’ lighting might be a tad more efficient).
The Bottom Line
The ROG Strix Morph 96 Wireless is everything I’ve come to expect from Asus’ keyboards — it has a nice, clean build, it’s comfortable to type on and excellent for gaming, and it gets excellent battery life. I’m a big fan of the move to this new Gear Link app (even if I felt slightly tricked when I still had to download an extra companion app), as it works well and doesn’t add 75 unnecessary background processes like Armoury Crate does. At $140, the ROG Strix Morph 96 is also much more budget-friendly than the ROG Azoth line (the Azoth X debuted with a retail price more than twice this — $300 — last year).
But I’ll also point out that at this exact moment, the pricier Asus ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless is currently selling for $129.99 at Best Buy. That’s $50 off of its debut retail price ($179.99), $80 off its “current retail price” of $209.99, and still $10 less than the ROG Strix Morph 96 Wireless. The ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless also has a 96-percent layout, a hot-swappable PCB, a similarly-limited multi-function roller, and it feels and sounds great. It also comes with a wrist rest, double-shot PBT keycaps, and significantly better battery life (even though the ROG Strix Morph 96 Wireless’ battery life is pretty impressive).
Keyboards aren’t like other components — you don’t need to upgrade every couple of years, and the tech is largely the same (just implemented differently), so the ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless is still a great buy. The ROG Strix Morph 96 Wireless will probably end up being a good option in the future, once the ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless clears shelves, but for now… I’d wait.






















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