Review

Lofree Flow 100 Full-Size Low-Profile Keyboard

A rare full-size low-profile mechanical keyboard with a numpad and Lofree's signature buttery Ghost linear switches.

4.4
out of 5 Great
Price $159.00

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Lofree Flow 100 Full-Size Low-Profile Keyboard

What we like

  • Numpad on a low-profile mechanical is genuinely hard to find
  • White Ghost linear switches feel smooth and creamy out of the box
  • Gasket-mounted aluminum body — solid and quiet for a thin board
  • Hot-swappable if you want to mix in tactile switches later

Could be better

  • No 2.4GHz dongle — Bluetooth or USB-C only
  • RGB is white-only, no per-key color
  • Heavier than you'd expect for a low-profile board

Full Review

The Flow 100 fills a gap almost nobody else is filling. Low-profile mechanical keyboards are everywhere now, but the vast majority cap out at 75% or TKL. If you spend your day in spreadsheets, accounting software, or any workflow where the numpad is muscle memory, your options have been: thick clacky full-size, or learn to live without. The Flow 100 is the rare third path.

Typing Feel

The White Ghost linear switches are the same buttery POM units that made the Flow 84 and Flow Lite cult favorites. They’re light, smooth, and almost wet-feeling under the finger — closer to a premium hi-pro linear than anything else in the low-profile world. Combined with the gasket mount and aluminum body, typing is quieter and more cushioned than the thin form factor suggests. There’s a slight thock instead of the hollow click most low-profiles produce.

Build and Layout

The body is full aluminum, which is great for desk presence and terrible for portability — this thing is heavier than several full-size, full-height boards I own. The 100-key layout is standard ANSI with a dedicated numpad, arrow cluster, and function row. No oddball compressed layout, no missing keys. If you’ve used any normal full-size keyboard, you’ll be at full speed in minutes.

Connectivity Trade-Off

Here’s where Lofree made a choice that will annoy some buyers: there’s no 2.4GHz USB receiver. You get Bluetooth 5.0 or USB-C wired, full stop. Bluetooth latency is fine for typing but if you also game on this board, the lack of a low-latency wireless option matters. The Flow Lite 100 ships with 2.4GHz; this one doesn’t. If wireless gaming is part of your day, look at the Lite instead.

Who Should Buy This

Buy the Flow 100 if you want the Flow’s signature smooth typing feel and you genuinely need a numpad — accountants, finance folks, data entry, CAD users, anyone who lives in spreadsheets. If you don’t need the numpad, the Flow 84 is cheaper, lighter, and feels identical. If you need 2.4GHz wireless, get the Flow Lite 100 instead.