---
product_id: 726572408
title: "8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Switch/Switch 2 & Windows – Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Connectivity, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, 4 Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB"
price: "758 zł"
currency: PLN
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.pl/products/726572408-8bitdo-all-button-arcade-controller-for-switch-switch-2-windows
store_origin: PL
region: Poland
---

# 3 connection modes: Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Ultra-thin, compact design (A4 size, 1.6cm thick) Hot-swappable PCB with 16 Kailh low-profile mechanical switches 8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Switch/Switch 2 & Windows – Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Connectivity, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, 4 Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB

**Price:** 758 zł
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🔥 Level up your fight game with pro-grade precision and portability!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** 8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Switch/Switch 2 & Windows – Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Connectivity, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, 4 Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB
- **How much does it cost?** 758 zł with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.pl](https://www.desertcart.pl/products/726572408-8bitdo-all-button-arcade-controller-for-switch-switch-2-windows)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Plug-and-Play Programmability:** 4 programmable buttons with quick remapping and replaceable lock caps for personalized control on the fly.
- • **Customizable Mechanical Switches:** Hot-swappable Kailh low-profile switches let you tailor tactile feedback and sound to your style.
- • **Precision Leverless Arcade Layout:** All-button design with quad-movement for lightning-fast combos and unmatched input accuracy.
- • **Seamless Multi-Device Connectivity:** Switch, Switch 2 & Windows ready with Bluetooth, 2.4G wireless, or wired modes for ultimate flexibility.
- • **Compact & Portable Pro-Level Design:** Slim, lightweight form factor fits perfectly in your bag—game anywhere, anytime without bulk.

## Overview

The 8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller is a versatile, leverless arcade stick designed for Nintendo Switch, Switch 2, and Windows. It offers three connectivity options—Bluetooth, 2.4G wireless, and wired—paired with a compact, ultra-thin form factor. Featuring hot-swappable Kailh low-profile mechanical switches and four programmable buttons, it delivers customizable, high-precision inputs ideal for fighting games and platformers. Perfect for gamers seeking a portable, professional-grade controller with flexible customization under $100.

## Description

8BitDo is a premier 3rd party video game hardware company with a special focus on retro themed game controllers. Renowned for producing the highest quality retro controllers on the market, 8BitDo’s controller line has been referred to as, “a range of excellent retro-style game controllers” by The Verge. 8BitDo’s goal is to produce premium quality game controllers with ultra-compatibility at economical prices. 8BitDo is a premier 3rd party video game hardware company with a special focus on retro themed game controllers. Renowned for producing the highest quality retro controllers on the market, 8BitDo’s controller line has been referred to as, “a range of excellent retro-style game controllers” by The Verge. 8BitDo’s goal is to produce premium quality game controllers with ultra-compatibility at economical prices. 8BitDo Controller for Switch 2 Latest Products 2.4G Controllers 8BitDo Arcade Controller 8BITDO X XBOX Accessories

Review: Great Intro To Leverless Fight Sticks - Growing up I loved Street Fighter II Turbo on the SNES. It was probably one of my most played games as a kid. There wasn’t much in the way of arcade style controls but I was more than content to mash buttons on my gamepad. My love of fighting games would continue on up through the PS1/Saturn to the PS2/Dreamcast era but eventually fell off for unexplained reasons. With the release of the Switch my interest reignited a bit but other than Smash I wasn’t really grabbing anything else. Watching YouTube for various reviews and recommendations on games and accessories I saw creators like Wulf Denn and Nihongo Gamer talking about leverless fight sticks for both fighting games and retro games and while I thought they were neat I didn’t think I had much use for them at first. But then I finally treated myself to a Switch 2 and while looking at games to pick up I saw glowing reviews of how well SF6 ran on the new console my algorithm began to teem with members of the fighting game community and I was seeing a lot of leverless controllers. I own quite a lot of various third party controllers but hadn’t bought an arcade stick since Tekken 4 on the PS2. Suddenly my thoughts were of checking out whether or not this might be for me and honestly there were a lot of options out there of all sorts of levels or pricing, customization options, and turnkey based options. Quite daunting but 8bitDo, whom I knew made an Arcade Stick, had an offering. I’m very familiar with 8bitDo, owning multiple controllers (a well loved Pro2, several Ultimates, an Ultimate 2C, and an SN30 Pro). I’ve bought so many for a few reasons. Build quality and feel we’re always excellent for one. A big, big kicker is they are one of the only (if not the only) whose customization software is available on both MacOs and iOS apart from Windows and Android, something that discouraged me from trying other 3rd party controllers because I didn’t have a PC to run them and most don’t offer manual mapping either unless I wanted to spend the money on something like the FlyDigi Apex4 (which…I did lol). Reviews all praised the construction and size and for the price ($79 on sale for the NES colorway) it seemed like a good entry into a hobby that could get very expensive very fast. I was excited when the controller arrived alongside my copy of SF6 and I hurried to unbox it and get the firmware updated so it would be Switch 2 compatible. Here’s where my review nearly dropped 2 stars. Initially I booted up the Ultimate V2 iOS app (all new controllers being on that, the previous one basically sunset) and the controller did not appear as an option. I did discover I could select the Pro3 and test inputs that way but no access to firmware or profile customization. No biggie, a quick trip to google said I needed to do it with the MacOs version. Fired up my MacBook and downloaded the latest version of Ultimate 2 from the product page (as there apparently 2 versions of Ultimate 2 available). Plugged it into, powered it on, clicked update…and nothing. I tried swapping cables, dongles, switch mode and x input and the controller flat out refused to update. I unplugged it and tried connecting to my Switch OLED just to make sure it wasn’t bricked and it connected just fine. Worse comes to worse I’d keep it just for the OG Switch and SteamDeck but that wasn’t 100% ideal for a peripheral where 2 of the selling points were MacOs software and Switch 2 compatibility. Google and Reddit searches made things seem dire: that 8bitDo’s Mac apps were broken and they didn’t care. But I reached out to customer support and 24 hours later I had an email chain going and within a 2 hours I had the firmware updated and I was playing SF6’s tutorials to test things out. So..why 5 stars? Again build quality is solid with the basic plastic, the matte glass face, and the rubberized bottom with keyboard style magnetic kickstands. The controller itself has some decent heft. The buttons are nice and clacky though this is a take it or leave it preference. I love mechanical keyboards so that’s an absolute win but that’s me. I have small/medium hands to the overall controller profile feels good as far as button size and placement. It has extra customizable buttons (included are caps to replace those to prevent misclicks) that don’t require their software to remap and placement to make a familiar WASD configuration for keyboard players. Buttons have good travel and I found it easy to pull off hadoukens and dragon punches within a few minutes of practice. Tactile switches for Switch/Off/Xinput (an included 2.4ghz dongle sits magnetized on the bottom) and SOCD lock are a nice touch. The former of that is important as one of the other selling points this has over similar controllers it that it can be used wirelessly which while not as good for latency in fighting games is a great option for travel and casual play. Out of the box it works on both Switch and PC and of course with the latest firmware it’s Switch 2 compatible (though no wake from sleep like their other controllers). As a newbie to leverless all these features make this a great turnkey introduction to this realm of the gaming sphere. It’s priced competitively against the competition namely Haute42 (and yeah I bought a C16 to try out as well) though it lacks the same level of customization regarding software/firmware, key cap, switches (especially if you want to reduce the noise), and artwork. However it works as intended and after that it’s up to me to work out the learning curve and my delusions of becoming a SF master. TL:DR a great entry to leverless controllers in a turnkey package for use with Switch and PC/Handhelds (also comes in an Xbox licensed version as well) for under $100.
Review: Great for FGC, platformers! Stick/analog binding added recently in update! - UPDATE: My primary issue with this was not clearly advertising that stick remapping was not supported. I figured that would be changed at some point and I'd update the review to 3 stars, but what I was not expecting was full left and right stick support in mapping! This is now a much, MUCH more interesting alternative to other leverless controllers and while it does not support the complex stick mapping of some smash-dedicated options, this is now viable to try out for platform fighters and offers significantly more compatibility with games that require the stick use, and it completely resolves all my complaints with this controller. VERY excited to dive back in! Original review below, for posterity. ___________________ I own 30 or so 8bitdo controllers. I've purchased most of their offerings and their kits to convert classic controllers to 2.4ghz, I use a pro2 as my main controller for thousands of hours in mariomaker2 and use a pro C2 as my primary PC controller and stick-focused gaming controller on switch. I play a ton of dpad platformers, and a ton of smash as well. Smash is the only game I still use a first party controller for, and I was really hoping to try out a leverless for smash. If the description clearly covered the fact that this controller is absolutely incapable of inputting any stick inputs, I might not be unhappy with it, or giving it 0 stars. I wasn't expecting a hitbox or similar style controller mapping that gives me really complicated angles. I wasn't even expecting a sliding scale of how much left or right from 0-255 or even a 128 or 255 option for directionality. I was simply expecting I could map full tilt cardinal stick directions to buttons and combine them to get angles. This would be imperfect for smash, but excellent for platformers that use the stick which isn't that uncommon anymore, even in 2d platformers! And it'd be fun to try for smash. I think, personally, that could work in some cases, feathering could give you control in a lot of cases and if you really need a specific angle, well, this isn't the controller for you. But unfortunately, this switch and PC controller is entirely missing an often required input from being supported in any way, which I personally feel makes it useless in all but very, very limited circumstances. I feel that it has not been marketed appropriately and that the dishonest description of the product will hold it back. If you are into FGC and you play a game that is compatible with a pad and does not require any stick input, this could be a good buy for you. There are cheaper leverless controllers on desertcart, but this has a nice, premium feel, it's weighty, it's wired or wireless with good latency and it can even connect to your NES or SNES with an adapter, which is neat! There is a lot of really cool 8bitdo goodness here, and even besides that it's an excellent feeling pad overall, the best leverless I've touched with some really neat little bean buttons you can also block off if you don't want remappable buttons or buttons in any specific spot. There is a lot to like here, if it fits your very specific needs and you will never, ever want stick inputs. For me though, this isn't clear in any advertising material or the listing here. For me, I want a modern nearly 100$ controller to offer a full, modern control suite. I know it's buttons, and we can't really do analog inputs, but they could have done something to make this work. When I asked 8bitdo support about this, they gave me a handwaivey answer and implied it was not likely to be a feature in the future. If I hear they do end up rolling it out, I might pick another one up! But this one is going to be returned because it's has extremely limited compatibility with only specific games.

## Features

- Compatible with Switch/Switch 2 and Windows. 3 connection modes - Connect to Switch via Bluetooth, to Windows via 2.4G, or to either device via wired. (Switch 2 compatibility requires latest firmware update)
- Leverless. Ultimate precision – Features an all-button arcade layout with quad-movement design for unmatched accuracy and ultra-fast inputs. Execute combos with greater speed and control.
- Ultra thin and compact – Nearly the size of an A4 sheet and as thin as 1.6 cm. Fight anytime, anywhere.
- Hot-swappable PCB - Features 16 Kailh Wizard low-profile mechanical switches, allowing you to customize with other switches that fit your needs.
- Programmable and practical – Remap P1, P2, P3, and P4 with fast mapping. Includes replaceable lock caps and independent control panel.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B0F7R4XTQX |
| Additional Features | Wireless |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,637 in Video Games ( See Top 100 in Video Games ) #28 in Nintendo Switch 2 Controllers #65 in Nintendo Switch Controllers #111 in PC Game Controllers |
| Brand Name | 8Bitdo |
| Button Quantity | 12 |
| Color | N Edition |
| Compatible Devices | Nintendo Switch, PC, Windows |
| Compatible Video Game Console Models | Nintendo Switch 2 |
| Connectivity Technology | USB |
| Controller Type | Push Button |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (206) |
| Hardware Platform | Gaming Console |
| Item Dimensions | 2.24 x 9.13 x 12.99 inches |
| Item Weight | 80 Grams |
| Manufacturer | 8BitDo |
| Model Name | N Edition |
| Model Number | 6922621507611 |
| Package Quantity | 1 |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |

## Images

![8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Switch/Switch 2 & Windows – Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Connectivity, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, 4 Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61VfetdnyjL.jpg)
![8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Switch/Switch 2 & Windows – Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Connectivity, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, 4 Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41Uivh6WdgL.jpg)
![8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Switch/Switch 2 & Windows – Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Connectivity, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, 4 Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41SCKeVkFDL.jpg)
![8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Switch/Switch 2 & Windows – Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Connectivity, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, 4 Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61NU1tsPfDL.jpg)
![8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Switch/Switch 2 & Windows – Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Connectivity, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, 4 Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51P2LBmHB0L.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Color** options.

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great Intro To Leverless Fight Sticks
*by A***N on February 9, 2026*

Growing up I loved Street Fighter II Turbo on the SNES. It was probably one of my most played games as a kid. There wasn’t much in the way of arcade style controls but I was more than content to mash buttons on my gamepad. My love of fighting games would continue on up through the PS1/Saturn to the PS2/Dreamcast era but eventually fell off for unexplained reasons. With the release of the Switch my interest reignited a bit but other than Smash I wasn’t really grabbing anything else. Watching YouTube for various reviews and recommendations on games and accessories I saw creators like Wulf Denn and Nihongo Gamer talking about leverless fight sticks for both fighting games and retro games and while I thought they were neat I didn’t think I had much use for them at first. But then I finally treated myself to a Switch 2 and while looking at games to pick up I saw glowing reviews of how well SF6 ran on the new console my algorithm began to teem with members of the fighting game community and I was seeing a lot of leverless controllers. I own quite a lot of various third party controllers but hadn’t bought an arcade stick since Tekken 4 on the PS2. Suddenly my thoughts were of checking out whether or not this might be for me and honestly there were a lot of options out there of all sorts of levels or pricing, customization options, and turnkey based options. Quite daunting but 8bitDo, whom I knew made an Arcade Stick, had an offering. I’m very familiar with 8bitDo, owning multiple controllers (a well loved Pro2, several Ultimates, an Ultimate 2C, and an SN30 Pro). I’ve bought so many for a few reasons. Build quality and feel we’re always excellent for one. A big, big kicker is they are one of the only (if not the only) whose customization software is available on both MacOs and iOS apart from Windows and Android, something that discouraged me from trying other 3rd party controllers because I didn’t have a PC to run them and most don’t offer manual mapping either unless I wanted to spend the money on something like the FlyDigi Apex4 (which…I did lol). Reviews all praised the construction and size and for the price ($79 on sale for the NES colorway) it seemed like a good entry into a hobby that could get very expensive very fast. I was excited when the controller arrived alongside my copy of SF6 and I hurried to unbox it and get the firmware updated so it would be Switch 2 compatible. Here’s where my review nearly dropped 2 stars. Initially I booted up the Ultimate V2 iOS app (all new controllers being on that, the previous one basically sunset) and the controller did not appear as an option. I did discover I could select the Pro3 and test inputs that way but no access to firmware or profile customization. No biggie, a quick trip to google said I needed to do it with the MacOs version. Fired up my MacBook and downloaded the latest version of Ultimate 2 from the product page (as there apparently 2 versions of Ultimate 2 available). Plugged it into, powered it on, clicked update…and nothing. I tried swapping cables, dongles, switch mode and x input and the controller flat out refused to update. I unplugged it and tried connecting to my Switch OLED just to make sure it wasn’t bricked and it connected just fine. Worse comes to worse I’d keep it just for the OG Switch and SteamDeck but that wasn’t 100% ideal for a peripheral where 2 of the selling points were MacOs software and Switch 2 compatibility. Google and Reddit searches made things seem dire: that 8bitDo’s Mac apps were broken and they didn’t care. But I reached out to customer support and 24 hours later I had an email chain going and within a 2 hours I had the firmware updated and I was playing SF6’s tutorials to test things out. So..why 5 stars? Again build quality is solid with the basic plastic, the matte glass face, and the rubberized bottom with keyboard style magnetic kickstands. The controller itself has some decent heft. The buttons are nice and clacky though this is a take it or leave it preference. I love mechanical keyboards so that’s an absolute win but that’s me. I have small/medium hands to the overall controller profile feels good as far as button size and placement. It has extra customizable buttons (included are caps to replace those to prevent misclicks) that don’t require their software to remap and placement to make a familiar WASD configuration for keyboard players. Buttons have good travel and I found it easy to pull off hadoukens and dragon punches within a few minutes of practice. Tactile switches for Switch/Off/Xinput (an included 2.4ghz dongle sits magnetized on the bottom) and SOCD lock are a nice touch. The former of that is important as one of the other selling points this has over similar controllers it that it can be used wirelessly which while not as good for latency in fighting games is a great option for travel and casual play. Out of the box it works on both Switch and PC and of course with the latest firmware it’s Switch 2 compatible (though no wake from sleep like their other controllers). As a newbie to leverless all these features make this a great turnkey introduction to this realm of the gaming sphere. It’s priced competitively against the competition namely Haute42 (and yeah I bought a C16 to try out as well) though it lacks the same level of customization regarding software/firmware, key cap, switches (especially if you want to reduce the noise), and artwork. However it works as intended and after that it’s up to me to work out the learning curve and my delusions of becoming a SF master. TL:DR a great entry to leverless controllers in a turnkey package for use with Switch and PC/Handhelds (also comes in an Xbox licensed version as well) for under $100.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great for FGC, platformers! Stick/analog binding added recently in update!
*by A***R on July 30, 2025*

UPDATE: My primary issue with this was not clearly advertising that stick remapping was not supported. I figured that would be changed at some point and I'd update the review to 3 stars, but what I was not expecting was full left and right stick support in mapping! This is now a much, MUCH more interesting alternative to other leverless controllers and while it does not support the complex stick mapping of some smash-dedicated options, this is now viable to try out for platform fighters and offers significantly more compatibility with games that require the stick use, and it completely resolves all my complaints with this controller. VERY excited to dive back in! Original review below, for posterity. ___________________ I own 30 or so 8bitdo controllers. I've purchased most of their offerings and their kits to convert classic controllers to 2.4ghz, I use a pro2 as my main controller for thousands of hours in mariomaker2 and use a pro C2 as my primary PC controller and stick-focused gaming controller on switch. I play a ton of dpad platformers, and a ton of smash as well. Smash is the only game I still use a first party controller for, and I was really hoping to try out a leverless for smash. If the description clearly covered the fact that this controller is absolutely incapable of inputting any stick inputs, I might not be unhappy with it, or giving it 0 stars. I wasn't expecting a hitbox or similar style controller mapping that gives me really complicated angles. I wasn't even expecting a sliding scale of how much left or right from 0-255 or even a 128 or 255 option for directionality. I was simply expecting I could map full tilt cardinal stick directions to buttons and combine them to get angles. This would be imperfect for smash, but excellent for platformers that use the stick which isn't that uncommon anymore, even in 2d platformers! And it'd be fun to try for smash. I think, personally, that could work in some cases, feathering could give you control in a lot of cases and if you really need a specific angle, well, this isn't the controller for you. But unfortunately, this switch and PC controller is entirely missing an often required input from being supported in any way, which I personally feel makes it useless in all but very, very limited circumstances. I feel that it has not been marketed appropriately and that the dishonest description of the product will hold it back. If you are into FGC and you play a game that is compatible with a pad and does not require any stick input, this could be a good buy for you. There are cheaper leverless controllers on amazon, but this has a nice, premium feel, it's weighty, it's wired or wireless with good latency and it can even connect to your NES or SNES with an adapter, which is neat! There is a lot of really cool 8bitdo goodness here, and even besides that it's an excellent feeling pad overall, the best leverless I've touched with some really neat little bean buttons you can also block off if you don't want remappable buttons or buttons in any specific spot. There is a lot to like here, if it fits your very specific needs and you will never, ever want stick inputs. For me though, this isn't clear in any advertising material or the listing here. For me, I want a modern nearly 100$ controller to offer a full, modern control suite. I know it's buttons, and we can't really do analog inputs, but they could have done something to make this work. When I asked 8bitdo support about this, they gave me a handwaivey answer and implied it was not likely to be a feature in the future. If I hear they do end up rolling it out, I might pick another one up! But this one is going to be returned because it's has extremely limited compatibility with only specific games.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ King of Leverless as of Now
*by N***H on July 28, 2025*

UPDATE: Still goated especially now that I've tested it works flawlessly on PS5 with a Brook Wingman FGC2. You have to get a firmware update with the Wingman and turn on the PS5 with a normal dualshock controller first. Plug the wingman in with the 8bitdo leverless wired and turn on the 8bitdo as a PC controller, NOT switch. It should then work seamlessly. Goated controller for fighting games, platformers, and I even play top down games like 2D Zelda with this. I mainly use this for fighting games specifically street fighter, tekken and marvel vs capcom and the buttons have been feeling perfect. They're mx switches so if the tactile feedback or the respond threshold isn't your cup of tea, you can hot swap them out for something more of your own flavor. The built in software let me remap buttons onto the P1-4 buttons, similar to how pad controllers have paddles and you just map face buttons to them. If you want to go more in depth though to mess around with macros or disable buttons to legally compete you'll need to download 8bitdo's software on your desktop to mess around with the deeper settings. I personally don't care for the extra P buttons at the bottom and luckily you can just replace the caps so they're flush with the face of the controller and you can't even press them anymore; it's been really modular and customizable I really love it. Its price compared to other competitors has made this probably one of the best leverless controllers for tournament play in fgc but its biggest fault is that there's no native PS4/5 compatibility and its other variant is xbox, so you'll need to buy a brook adapter if you want to play on PS setups at events. This one works for switch and PC both wired and wireless, and the wireless connectivity has felt pretty lagless so if you have the balls to play competitively wirelessly it might be worthwhile but just plug it in to be safe. It's perfect for casual play though. Once mixing this with a brook adapter, I don't see any reason to buy from other brands, this particular leverless is a really high quality slab that rests great on my lap and table + it has optional feet to slant it up like a keyboard. Other brands that came out before this including razer's kitsune, any controller from haute, qanba, hori etc, had great designs but they never had exactly what I wanted with the options and shapes of the buttons + their premium prices turned me off. 8bitdo came out of nowhere with this controller and it feels like it blew everyone else out of the water with its quality and customization. If you're looking for a good leverless controller for fighting games, I firmly believe this is the best option. I know 8bitdo has a strong partnership with xbox and nintendo but I hope they can appropriate this for playstation fgc as well.

## Frequently Bought Together

- 8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Switch & Windows – Bluetooth, 2.4G, Wired Connectivity, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, 4 Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB
- 8BitDo All-Button Arcade Controller for Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One & PC, 2.4G Wireless, Low-profile Mechanical Switches, Programmable Buttons, Hot-swappable PCB, RGB Lighting - Officially Licensed

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*Product available on Desertcart Poland*
*Store origin: PL*
*Last updated: 2026-05-26*