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Best One-Handed Gaming Keyboards in 2026: Keypads, Thumbsticks, and What to Test

One-handed gaming keyboards are not all the same product.

Some are compact mechanical WASD boards. Some are macro pads. Some are closer to a left-hand controller with an analog thumbstick. If you buy the wrong type, you can end up with a device that looks useful but does not actually solve your game setup problem.

I published the full source-backed version here, with official product pages, visible prices, original product photos, buy links, and a testing checklist:

Best One-Handed Gaming Keyboard 2026: Top 9 Keypads With Joysticks

This DEV.to version keeps the practical comparison and testing workflow.

Fast answer

If you want the strongest ergonomic keypad overall, start with the Azeron Cyborg II.

If you want a mainstream brand with broad availability, start with the Razer Tartarus Pro.

If you want a cheap mechanical one-hand board, start with the Redragon K585 DITI.

If you play on console, check the HORI Tactical Assault Commander Mechanical Keypad.

If you want a macro-heavy pad for gaming and work shortcuts, the Koolertron 48-Key Programmable Mechanical Keypad is the more practical oddball.

The comparison that matters

The main choice is not "which one has the most keys?"

The real choice is:

Need Better fit
Analog thumb movement Azeron Cyborg II, Azeron Keyzen, HORI F14
Mainstream software and retail availability Razer Tartarus Pro, Razer Tartarus V2
Cheap mechanical WASD layout Redragon K585 DITI
Cheap wireless keypad Redragon K585 PRO Wireless
Console-focused keyboard and mouse control HORI TAC Mechanical
MMO profiles and analog stick placement HORI TAC F14
Lots of programmable macro keys Koolertron 48-Key Programmable Keypad

That is why a one-handed keyboard review should separate thumbsticks, switch type, software, wired/wireless mode, and profile storage instead of only ranking by price.

My top 9 picks

Rank Model Checked price Best use
1 Azeron Cyborg II $292.00 official page Ergonomic one-handed keypad with 360 analog thumbstick
2 Azeron Keyzen $216.00 official page Mechanical-switch Azeron-style keypad
3 Razer Tartarus Pro US$129.99 official page Mainstream analog optical keypad
4 Razer Tartarus V2 US$79.99 official page Mainstream value keypad
5 Redragon K585 DITI $36.99 official page Budget one-handed mechanical keyboard
6 Redragon K585 PRO Wireless $49.99 official page Cheap wireless one-handed keyboard
7 HORI TAC Mechanical $129.99 official page PS5, PS4, and PC keypad
8 HORI TAC F14 $139.99 official page Final Fantasy XIV and MMO specialist keypad
9 Koolertron 48-Key Programmable Keypad $95.99 official page Macro-heavy gaming and work keypad

Prices were checked on May 26, 2026. Treat them as current-at-check references, not permanent price promises.

Azeron Cyborg II: best overall if you will tune it

Azeron Cyborg II one-handed gaming keypad official product photo

The Cyborg II is less like a sliced keyboard and more like a custom left-hand controller.

The strength is reach: raised finger towers, many mappable inputs, and a 360 analog thumbstick. That makes sense for MMOs, RPGs, survival games, builders, and action games where you want movement plus many commands under one hand.

The tradeoff is setup time. This is not a "plug in and instantly feel faster" device. You need to map profiles, adjust the fit, and test game by game.

Razer Tartarus Pro: safest mainstream pick

Razer Tartarus Pro analog optical gaming keypad official product photo

The Tartarus Pro is the safer mainstream option because Razer has wide retail availability and familiar software support.

The analog optical switches are the reason to pick it over the Tartarus V2, but they are not magic by themselves. In many games, the device still behaves like normal keyboard input unless you build your profile and bindings around analog or dual-function behavior.

If you do not want to learn a more unusual ergonomic layout, this is easier to recommend than Azeron.

Redragon K585 DITI: the budget mechanical answer

Redragon K585 DITI one-handed mechanical gaming keyboard official product photo

The K585 DITI is a practical cheap pick because it behaves like a small mechanical keyboard.

That is good if you want familiar WASD, number-row commands, macro keys, and a palm rest without paying premium keypad prices.

It does not solve analog movement. It also will not match the ergonomics or software depth of more expensive keypads. But for a low-cost one-hand board, it is the sensible starting point.

HORI F14: a reminder that MMO players need different hardware

HORI Tactical Assault Commander F14 Final Fantasy XIV Black Edition official product photo

The HORI TAC F14 is not a general FPS recommendation.

It is interesting because MMO players often need saved profiles, many repeated commands, and comfortable directional control more than they need the fastest possible WASD setup.

The important caveat: HORI says this F14 version is a non-mechanical membrane keypad. If switch feel matters to you, that should be a hard buying filter.

Koolertron 48-Key: more macro pad than gaming keypad

Koolertron 48-key programmable one-handed mechanical keypad official product photo

The Koolertron 48-key pad is the unusual pick because it is not only for gaming.

It can make sense for MMOs, simulators, OBS scenes, editing, CAD, Photoshop, design tools, and repetitive work shortcuts.

Buy it only if you are comfortable configuring layers and macros. If you want thumbstick movement, choose something else.

What to test after buying

Do this before the return window closes.

  1. Open a keyboard tester and press every key that should send a normal keyboard event.
  2. Test game combinations such as W + A + Shift + Space.
  3. Check repeated input if one key fires too fast when held.
  4. Test wired and wireless modes separately if the keypad supports both.
  5. Save one profile, unplug the keypad, plug it back in, and confirm whether the layout survived.
  6. Test thumbsticks in the maker software, Windows controller settings, or a gamepad tester if the stick does not emit keyboard events.

For browser-based checks, I use:

Important browser limit: a website can only see keys that arrive as browser keyboard events. Vendor profile buttons, RGB controls, Fn layers, some macro keys, and analog thumbsticks may not appear in an online keyboard tester even when the hardware is working.

Older keypads I would be careful with

Some discontinued one-handed keyboards still have fans, but they are weak normal-new-buy recommendations:

  • Logitech G13 - discontinued, usually used-market pricing, old software, uncertain condition.
  • Razer Orbweaver and Nostromo - historically important, but the current Tartarus line is a cleaner buying path.
  • Unknown marketplace clones - cheap, but documentation and software links can be weak.

Bottom line

Buy by use case:

  • Choose Azeron for ergonomics and analog movement.
  • Choose Razer for mainstream support.
  • Choose Redragon for cheap mechanical one-hand layouts.
  • Choose HORI for console or FFXIV-specific needs.
  • Choose Koolertron when macros matter as much as gaming.

Then test every key and every profile before you keep it.

Full article with source links, product photos, buy links, FAQ schema, and the complete 9-product breakdown:

Best One-Handed Gaming Keyboard 2026: Top 9 Keypads With Joysticks

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