Review

Logitech G915 TKL Wireless Mechanical Keyboard

A slim, low-profile wireless mechanical keyboard that pairs gaming-grade switches with an aluminum chassis thin enough to look at home on any work desk.

4.6
out of 5 Excellent
Price $179.99

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Logitech G915 TKL Wireless Mechanical Keyboard

What we like

  • Low-profile GL switches feel crisp without the travel of full-height mechanicals
  • Aircraft-grade aluminum top plate makes it genuinely rigid, not hollow-feeling
  • 1ms Lightspeed wireless plus Bluetooth for a second device
  • Tenkeyless layout frees up real desk space for a mouse
  • Dedicated media keys and a metal volume roller

Could be better

  • 40-hour battery life drops fast with RGB at full brightness
  • Price sits at premium territory for a TKL
  • Keycaps are thin ABS and will shine over time

Full Review

The G915 TKL is one of the few mechanical keyboards that actually works as a dual-purpose board. It’s marketed as a gaming keyboard, but the low-profile chassis and tenkeyless footprint make it slot into a clean work setup without the bulk you’d expect from a mechanical with RGB.

Build Quality

The top plate is aircraft-grade aluminum, and it shows. There’s no flex when you press into the deck, and the whole thing feels dense for how thin it is. At roughly 22mm tall, it sits closer to a low-profile laptop keyboard than a traditional mechanical — you don’t need a wrist rest to type on it comfortably.

The only weak point is the keycaps. They’re thin ABS and will develop shine on heavily-used keys within a year. Logitech didn’t put PBT on this board until the G915 X refresh, which is worth noting if longevity matters more than price.

Typing and Switches

The GL switches come in three flavors: Tactile, Linear, and Clicky. Tactile is the sweet spot for mixed work-and-gaming use — enough feedback to type accurately without the volume of Clicky. Actuation travel is 2.7mm, which feels short if you’re coming from a full-height mechanical, but the bottom-out is satisfying and the switches register fast.

Compared to something like the Logitech MX Mechanical Mini, the G915 TKL feels snappier and more gaming-oriented, while the MX Mechanical is tuned for office quiet.

Wireless and Battery

Lightspeed 2.4GHz is genuinely indistinguishable from wired for typing or gaming. Bluetooth is slower but handy for a second device — pairing it with a tablet or laptop alongside your main PC works well. Battery life is the catch: Logitech claims 40 hours at full RGB, and that’s accurate, but it means charging weekly if you leave the lights on. Dial brightness down and you’ll stretch it significantly.

Who Should Buy This

Buy the G915 TKL if you want a mechanical keyboard that looks professional enough for a video call but still has the switches and wireless performance for gaming sessions after hours. If you only care about office typing and don’t need RGB or 1ms wireless, the MX Mechanical Mini is half the price. If you want the latest version with PBT keycaps and tri-mode connectivity, look at the G915 X TKL instead — but expect to pay more.