Friday, April 15th 2022

Mountain Launches the Everest 60 Modular Gaming Keyboard with a 60% Keyset

MOUNTAIN, creator of innovative, premium peripherals with user-centric design to enable gamers and content creators to perform at their best, introduces its first small form factor keyboard with Everest 60. Staying true to its mission of delivering peak performance, MOUNTAIN cut no corners with the latest entry to the Everest product family.

Everest 60 comes in the extremely compact 60% form factor but does not cut necessary functional corners, as arrow keys remain part of the layout. Contrasting its sleek and minimalistic exterior is a complex and sophisticated interior design, using multiple layers of foam and silicone to create a satisfying and muted sound profile.
Check out the TechPowerUp Review of the Mountain Everest 60!

Featuring a plethora of high-end tuning, the manufacturing of Everest 60 includes countless extra steps to achieve a premium result. Unheard of outside of the keyboard enthusiast DIY space, including additional materials and hours of manual precision work, this intricate attention to detail delivers value unlike any other keyboard on the market today.

Premium switches are a key element to a superior mechanical keyboard. MOUNTAIN developed its very own lineup of mechanical switches with MOUNTAIN Linear 45, Linear 45 Speed, and Tactile 55 switches, which make their debut on Everest 60. Factory-lubed and optimized for smooth and precise operation, these switches are rated for a lifetime of 100 million actuations.

Rounding off its meticulous sound design are Cherry stabilizers, hand-clipped and hand-lubricated from the factory to enable rattle-free gaming and typing experiences. All Everest 60 keyboards ship with double-shot keycaps made of extremely durable PBT, guaranteeing translucent legends that never fade or wear off.

Much like Everest, Everest 60 is modular and upgradeable with its separately sold Everest 60 Numpad, which is hot-pluggable and can connect on either side. The switches are hot-swappable and easy to replace or exchange with any other Cherry MX style 3-pin or 5-pin switch.

Customization is at the heart of MOUNTAIN's user-centric design philosophy. To enable every user to make Everest 60 truly their own, its launch is accompanied by the release of ten MOUNTAIN Mineral keycap sets. Also made of PBT and featuring translucent double-shot legends, a wide choice of colorways is available, inspired by some of the world's most beautiful minerals.

"MOUNTAIN's strong focus on putting users' needs front and centre of every step in our product development bears fruit in a 60% mechanical keyboard unlike any other," says Tobias Brinkmann, Founder and CEO of MOUNTAIN. "Everest 60's custom layout ensures that, despite its portable form factor, functionality for both gamers and content creators remains intact."

"The enormous success of Everest Max showed that our idea of a modern and innovative mechanical keyboard resonates incredibly well with gamers and content creators" added Bram Rongen, Brand Strategy Manager of MOUNTAIN. "We condensed the very essence of Everest in Everest 60 and introduced some of the latest trends in enthusiast keyboard tuning, such as multi-layered noise-dampening, 5-pin hot-swappable switch support, and more."

MOUNTAIN Everest 60, Everest 60 Numpad, MOUNTAIN Mineral keycap sets, and MOUNTAIN Switches are now available, in stock and ready for immediate dispatch at this page.

Pricing:
  • Everest 60: £109.99
  • Everest 60 Numpad: £34.99
  • Mineral Keycap Sets: £34.99
MOUNTAIN Linear 45, Tactile 55, Linear 45 Speed Switch Packs:
  • 90x MOUNTAIN Switch: £29.99
  • 110x MOUNTAIN Switch: £39.99
Bundles:
  • Everest 60 + Numpad: £144.99
  • Everest 60 + Mineral PBT Keycap set: £119.99
  • Everest 60 + Numpad + Mineral PBT Keycap Set: £154.99
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9 Comments on Mountain Launches the Everest 60 Modular Gaming Keyboard with a 60% Keyset

#1
AusWolf
Mountain launches the Everest... Nice! :roll:
Posted on Reply
#2
Tartaros
This should be the default format for keyboards at this point. If they had also an additional row with the PFs that would be perfect for me.
Posted on Reply
#3
TheDeeGee
Less keyboard for more price seems to be the trend nowadays.

Then again, i been having my eye on the Uniqey Q100, which is 300.
Posted on Reply
#4
Vayra86
AusWolfMountain launches the Everest... Nice! :roll:
Sure now let's see them top that release with anything coming next. Impossibru!
Posted on Reply
#5
AnarchoPrimitiv
Why is it so difficult for them (numerous brands that aren't the size of corsair, for example) to also offer their keyboards in white? LED/RGB lighting looks so much better with white since it doesn't drink up the light like black does. Ive seen plenty of TKL or smaller (preferred size as long as it still has arrow keys) keyboards that look awesome, but since they're not offered in white, they're just a non-starter for me (have a white PC build and all peripherals are white). White builds are more popular now than they've been since all PCs were white/beige, so I feel as though the sales are there to justify the additionalbproduction, and it's not like it would require different tooling, just different color plastic pellets for injection molding (unless they CNC mill it, though that's generally for polycarbonate and more expensive keyboards)... Sorry for the rant, just getting tired of the assumption that everyone wants black, just like the assumption a few years ago was that every "gamer" thinks a red and black color scheme is the preferred choice of the most 1337 h4x0r gamer instead of the played out, cliché trope it actually is....
Posted on Reply
#7
AusWolf
Vayra86Sure now let's see them top that release with anything coming next. Impossibru!
Maybe it'll be called the Olympus Mons.
Posted on Reply
#9
AsRock
TPU addict
From a video i watched on this it seems pretty nice even the key presses are good sounding imo. Sadly it's not TKL with a detachable numpad that don't make the distance bigger.
Posted on Reply
Nov 22nd, 2024 03:12 EST change timezone

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