GIGABYTE Launches AORUS K10 INFINITY Keyboard and M10 INFINITY Mouse at COMPUTEX 2026

The keyboard becomes feedback, not just input.
The K10's OLED screen displays real-time gameplay metrics, turning the device into an active tool for performance analysis.

At COMPUTEX 2026 in Taipei, GIGABYTE introduced two gaming peripherals that ask a quiet but consequential question: what if the tools in a player's hands could also serve as mirrors, reflecting their performance back to them in real time? The AORUS K10 INFINITY keyboard and M10 INFINITY mouse represent a considered step toward collapsing the distance between human intention and machine response, blending magnetic precision, ultra-high polling rates, and a browser-based control platform that travels with the player rather than anchoring them to a single machine. In doing so, GIGABYTE gestures toward a future where peripherals are not passive instruments but active partners in the ongoing project of self-improvement.

  • The gap between pressing a key and the computer registering it has long been a quiet frustration for competitive players — GIGABYTE is now making that gap nearly theoretical with an 8,000Hz polling rate and magnetic switches tunable to 0.1mm of travel.
  • A 3.1-inch OLED touchscreen embedded in the K10 keyboard disrupts the traditional separation between playing and analyzing, letting players read their own Actions Per Minute and error counts mid-match without ever leaving the game.
  • The M10 mouse doubles the polling rate standard found on most gaming mice to 8K, pairing optical switches with a hybrid shell designed to feel as precise in the hand as it is on the sensor level.
  • The absence of traditional driver software is itself a statement — GiMATE Web Edition lets players configure and sync their entire peripheral setup from any browser, freeing their settings from any single machine.
  • Both devices are live on the COMPUTEX 2026 floor, where the proof is tactile: visitors can feel the difference between fractions of a millimeter, and the industry is watching to see whether granular personalization becomes the new baseline.

At COMPUTEX 2026 in Taipei, GIGABYTE arrived with a clear argument: the next frontier in gaming peripherals is not raw speed alone, but precision, real-time feedback, and configuration that follows the player wherever they go. The AORUS K10 INFINITY keyboard and M10 INFINITY mouse are the hardware making that case.

The K10 centers on magnetic switches that respond to proximity rather than physical contact, adjustable to trigger at just 0.1 millimeters of travel across multiple stages. At 8,000 polls per second and rated for 100 million keystrokes, the keyboard is built to outlast most players' patience for any single setup. Its most striking feature, however, is a 3.1-inch OLED touchscreen embedded in the surface — a live readout of Actions Per Minute, key mileage, precision scores, and errors that transforms the keyboard into a feedback instrument a player can consult mid-match.

The M10 mouse extends the same philosophy. Optical switches and an 8K polling rate — double the current common standard — combine with an excimer-coated exterior and an aluminum-magnesium alloy base to produce a device engineered for both feel and minimal latency.

Neither peripheral requires traditional drivers. GiMATE Web Edition, GIGABYTE's browser-based control platform, handles customization, monitoring, and lighting from any device, syncing settings across gear so the configuration belongs to the player, not the machine. Available in black and ICE white, both devices are on the COMPUTEX floor now — and what they signal together is that the keyboard and mouse are becoming something more than input devices. They are becoming instruments through which players measure and refine themselves.

At COMPUTEX 2026 in Taipei, GIGABYTE walked onto the stage with two pieces of hardware designed to collapse the distance between intention and action in competitive gaming. The AORUS K10 INFINITY keyboard and M10 INFINITY mouse represent the company's bet that the next frontier in gaming peripherals isn't raw speed alone—it's precision, customization, and the ability to measure yourself in real time.

The K10 INFINITY keyboard sits at the center of this vision. Its switches are magnetic, which means they respond to proximity rather than physical contact, and they can be tuned to trigger at 0.1 millimeters of travel. For a player accustomed to mechanical keyboards, this is a meaningful shift: the ability to adjust exactly when a keystroke registers, down to a tenth of a millimeter, across multiple stages. The keyboard polls the system 8,000 times per second—fast enough that the gap between pressing a key and the computer knowing about it becomes almost theoretical. The switches themselves are rated for 100 million keystrokes, a lifespan long enough that most players will upgrade their entire setup before wearing them out.

But the K10's most distinctive feature is the 3.1-inch OLED touchscreen built into its surface. This isn't decoration. The screen displays real-time gameplay metrics: Actions Per Minute, key mileage, precision scores, and error counts. A player can glance down mid-match and see exactly how they're performing, then adjust their trigger settings on the fly without leaving the game or opening software. GIGABYTE calls this the Combat Power feature, and it transforms the keyboard from a tool into a feedback instrument.

The M10 INFINITY mouse complements this philosophy. It uses optical switches—another proximity-based design—and supports an 8K polling rate, doubling the standard 4K rate found on many gaming mice. The shell combines an excimer-coated exterior, chosen for its skin-friendly texture, with an aluminum-magnesium alloy base that provides durability and consistent glide. The result is a device engineered to feel good in the hand while responding to movement with minimal latency.

Neither device requires traditional software to operate. GIGABYTE introduced GiMATE Web Edition, a browser-based control platform that handles customization, performance monitoring, and lighting adjustments without drivers or installations. A player can configure their keyboard and mouse from any device with a web browser, then sync those settings across their gear. This approach sidesteps the friction of bloated software suites and makes the peripherals more portable—the settings follow the player, not the machine.

Both the K10 and M10 will ship in standard black and in ICE white, allowing players to match their aesthetic preferences to their performance choices. The devices are on display at COMPUTEX 2026 in the GIGABYTE Consumer Booth, where visitors can test the magnetic switches and feel the difference between 0.1-millimeter increments of adjustment. What GIGABYTE is signaling here is clear: gaming peripherals are moving toward personalization at a granular level, real-time performance feedback, and cloud-based configuration. The keyboard and mouse are no longer just input devices. They're becoming active participants in how a player understands and improves their own performance.

The lineup extends innovation beyond the system to every player interaction.
— GIGABYTE, on the design philosophy of the K10 and M10
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why does a keyboard need a touchscreen? Isn't that just adding complexity?

Model

It's not complexity for its own sake. The screen shows you live data about how you're playing—your precision, your error rate, your speed. You can see it without breaking focus, and adjust your trigger settings right there. It's feedback built into the tool itself.

Inventor

But most players never look at their keyboard during a match.

Model

True. But the ones who do—the competitive players, the ones grinding to improve—they're the audience here. For them, this is like having a coach sitting next to you, showing you metrics in real time.

Inventor

The 0.1-millimeter trigger adjustment sounds absurdly precise. Can a human actually feel the difference?

Model

At the highest levels of play, yes. In fighting games or fast-paced shooters, the difference between a keystroke registering at 1 millimeter versus 1.1 millimeters can matter. It's not about feeling it in the moment—it's about having control over exactly when your input registers.

Inventor

And the browser-based control platform—why does that matter?

Model

No drivers to install, no bloated software running in the background. Your settings live in the cloud. You can configure your keyboard from your phone, your laptop, anywhere. It's portable in a way traditional gaming peripherals aren't.

Inventor

So GIGABYTE is betting that gamers want their gear to be smarter, more customizable, and less tethered to one machine.

Model

Exactly. The peripherals are becoming part of a larger ecosystem, not standalone devices.

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