Turtle Beach Command Series keyboard and mouse with touchscreens announced

Turtle Beach has had a single series in its keyboard lineup, albeit a well-fleshed-out one. The Vulcan keyboards offer all form factors, but they lack the modern, and more common, Hall effect switches. This is where the Command series comes in. The gaming mice lineup, on the other hand, has been more diverse, and the Command series expands the portfolio with three new offerings.
Turtle Beach Command Series KB7 TKL and KB5 Full-Size keyboards



Starting with the Command KB7 TKL, it is a wired keyboard with Hall effect switches with adjustable actuation and Rapid Trigger. The more interesting bit, a 4.3-inch touchscreen called the Command Touch Display that has built-in OBS controls and Streamlabs functions, making streaming more seamless. But it offers a lot more features, so users who don’t stream can also make full use of it. It can let you trigger macros, switch profiles, adjust audio, launch apps, and monitor system stats.
As the keyboard itself, it comes with double-shot PBT keycaps, 8K polling and 0.125ms latency, per-key RGB lighting, and a switch lifecycle of 100 million keystrokes. It is also compatible with the newly announced KP7 numpad through the modular rails, so those who prefer the full-size layout can have that too, when needed.
Coming to the KB5, it is a full-size keyboard, so no detachable numpad, and the touchscreen is also smaller at 2.4 inches. It does not have Hall effect switches but Titan low‑profile mechanical switches instead, which actuate at 1.2mm and have a 42-gram actuation force with 3.1mm of total travel. Turtle Beach has implemented what it's calling ReacTap for faster resets.
Turtle Beach Command Series MC7, MC5, and MC3 gaming mouse


The MC7 looks like the most interesting offering because of the 2.25-inch Command Touch Display. The screen lets you adjust DPI on the fly, trigger macros, control OBS, and more. It also stands out with its 24/7 Power System with dual 1,000 mAh batteries and a hot swap dock, but unlike the Glorious Model D3, it doesn’t seem to have an internal backup battery. The MC7 uses the Owl‑Eye 30K Optical sensor with 8K polling rate and Titan Optical Switches with a 150 million lifecycle. It also has tri-mode connectivity with 2.4 GHz, wired, and Bluetooth modes.
Instead of the touchscreen and the swappable battery, the MC5 brings quite a few additional buttons with a total of 29, including the side scroll barrel. It is also an 8K polling mouse with 0.125ms latency and features the same sensor. It can last up to 40 hours at 8K polling rate and likely much more on lower polling rates.
Lastly, the MC3 is a cheaper alternative to the MC5 with wired functionality but the same design and 29 programmable buttons. It also has the same sensor, minus the 8K polling.
Turtle Beach Command Series pricing and availability
Both the keyboards, the KP7 numpad, and the three mice are available for pre-order today, April 23. The Command KB7 is priced at $200, the KB5 costs $150, and the KP7 is priced at $100. All three will be available for purchase from May 21.
The Command Series MC7 gaming mouse is priced at $160, the MC5 is priced at $120, and the MC3 costs $80. All three will be available for purchase starting July 19.





















