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Wuque Studio Nama: This 8.6kg Keyboard Uses a Real Watch Movement as Its Volume Knob

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ARTICLE – The custom mechanical keyboard scene has never been shy about excess, but Wuque Studio just redefined what “premium” means with the Nama. This 80% wireless keyboard integrates a fully functional mechanical watch movement under sapphire crystal glass, turning the volume knob into a mesmerizing display of exposed gears and spinning flywheels. The keyboard weighs up to 8.6 kg in its heaviest configuration. That is not a typo.

NAMA 05



Named after Paleoloxodon namadicus, the largest fossil elephant ever documented, the Nama represents Wuque Studio’s evolution from the 2021 Mammoth75. The design philosophy here leans hard into tactile maximalism: instead of clock hands or a dial, the watch movement exists purely as mechanical theater. The gears tick and rotate as you adjust volume, creating what the company describes as a moment to “enjoy the present” while you type.

Price: From $749
Group Buy: December 9-23, 2025
Units Available: 300 globally
Where to buy: Wuque Studio

Whether that sentiment lands or feels like marketing poetry depends entirely on how you respond to $1,300 keyboards with tourbillon movements. Most luxury keyboards in the $500 to $800 range focus on sound signatures, gasket mounting systems, or exotic materials. Wuque Studio looked at that playbook and decided exposed horology was the flex nobody asked for but some will absolutely need.

The Weight Question

The watch movement is only part of the statement. The other is mass. Numbers this extreme demand context. The aluminum-cased Nama tips the scales at 6.6 kg, roughly 14.6 pounds. Opt for the brass bottom case and you are looking at 8.6 kg, which translates to 19 pounds of keyboard sitting on your desk. For comparison, a MacBook Pro 16-inch weighs about 2.1 kg. You could stack four of them and still not match the Nama’s heft.




NAMA 01

This weight serves a purpose beyond bragging rights. Desktop stability becomes absolute. The Nama will not budge during aggressive typing sessions, and there is zero flex or wobble in the chassis. Acoustic dampening benefits from the mass as well, though Wuque Studio has not published specific sound profiles yet. Moving it between setups or taking it anywhere becomes a deliberate logistical decision rather than a casual grab.

Technical Foundation

Beneath the watch movement spectacle sits a capable wireless keyboard. The Nama supports tri-mode connectivity through USB-C wired, Bluetooth, and 2.4 GHz wireless. Dual 4,000 mAh batteries handle power duties, though battery life estimates remain conspicuously absent from official specifications. Given the weight and premium positioning, you probably will not be carrying this around enough to drain both cells.

NAMA 04




Power aside, the typing feel gets equal attention. Mounting uses a silica gel particle system layered beneath the PCB, which isolates vibration and softens the bottom-out feel without introducing the mushiness some gasket mounts produce. It is a smart choice for a keyboard this heavy, where rigidity could otherwise translate to harshness.

That foundation supports a 1.6mm PCB with hot-swappable sockets compatible with standard 3-pin and 5-pin MX switches. Polling rates hit 1kHz on wired and 2.4 GHz connections, dropping to 133Hz over Bluetooth. VIA compatibility means full macro support, key remapping, and RGB customization through on-board controls.

Arrival format is pre-assembled kit: stabilizers lubed and installed, but switches and keycaps sold separately. Budget accordingly, because Gateron Oil King V2 switches run about $60 for 90 units, and quality keycaps can easily add another $100 to $200.

All of that hardware sits beneath the real draw: the watch movement itself.




Movement Options and Pricing

Two movement options exist. The standard flywheel edition includes visible gears and rotating components under sapphire glass at base price. The tourbillon edition adds $400 to any configuration. Tourbillons originated as accuracy-improving mechanisms in watchmaking, though here they function purely as visual complexity: dozens of additional micro-components working in concert, all visible through that sapphire window.

NAMA 03

Pricing breaks down by case material and movement selection. Aluminum bottom case variants, including Amethyst Night, Titanium Shadow, Rose Quartz, Violet Whisper, Crimson Royale, and Lunar Silver colorways, start at $749 for the standard flywheel. Add the tourbillon and you reach $1,149.99. Brass bottom case options (Nova Frost, Midnight Blue, Noir Eclipse, and Emerald Dusk) begin at $899.99, climbing to $1,299.99 with the tourbillon upgrade.

These prices place the Nama firmly in collector territory. You could buy several excellent custom keyboards for the cost of one brass tourbillon Nama. The question becomes whether the watch movement integration and extreme build quality justify the premium over keyboards that type identically but weigh a fraction as much.




Price is only half the equation—configuration determines the final build.

Customization and Availability

Standard edition buyers choose from fixed color pairings with only movement selection as a variable. Bespoke edition purchasers, available only to existing Wuque Studio community members, unlock deeper customization: 10 top case colors, 9 bottom case combinations across brass and aluminum finishes, 6 plate materials including PC, POM, FR4, aluminum, carbon fiber, and brass, plus optional pre-installed switches and keycaps from the Wuque catalog. At $80 extra, the Bespoke tier represents genuine value for anyone who wants color combinations the standard palette does not offer.

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Group buy runs December 9 through December 23, 2025, with a hard cap at 300 units globally. Shipping estimates target March 2026. Wuque Studio has not confirmed whether additional production runs will follow the initial 300. If you want one, the window is narrow and the competition for units will be intense among keyboard enthusiasts.




The Collector’s Calculation

Few products occupy the intersection where the Nama sits. It demands both keyboard enthusiasm and appreciation for mechanical horology. The typing experience itself, while enabled by quality components and thoughtful engineering, delivers what any well-built custom keyboard provides. The sapphire-covered watch movement transforms a utilitarian input device into something closer to a desk sculpture.

The details reinforce that intent. Traditional screw-in construction replaces quick-assembly ball-catch systems, prioritizing stability and seamlessness over convenience. A 7.6-degree typing angle and 375.9 x 172.1 x 46.6mm footprint fit standard ergonomic expectations. RGB underglow and per-key backlighting handle aesthetics beyond the mechanical centerpiece. Everything about the Nama suggests a keyboard built for people who already own several excellent keyboards and want something genuinely different.

Price: From $749
Group Buy: December 9-23, 2025
Units Available: 300 globally
Where to buy: Wuque Studio

At $749 for entry and $1,299.99 for the full brass tourbillon experience, the Nama prices itself as a statement piece rather than a daily driver recommendation. Resale values could climb substantially given the 300-unit limit, though banking on keyboard appreciation feels speculative. What Wuque Studio has built is undeniably impressive: a functional mechanical watch movement, sapphire crystal protection, and uncompromising build quality packed into a wireless keyboard that weighs more than many desktop computers.




Whether that combination speaks to you probably depends on how you feel about your current volume knob.

Configuration Price
Aluminum + Standard Flywheel $749
Aluminum + Tourbillon $1,149.99
Brass + Standard Flywheel $899.99
Brass + Tourbillon $1,299.99
Bespoke Edition +$80


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