#Configuration 60 He v2

1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)

lusty spoke
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Hey 👋

I’m planning to buy the Wooting 60HE v2 and I’d love to get your advice on the best possible configuration for my use case.

🎯 My main use:
• Competitive FPS (Call of Duty, Battlefield)
• Focus on pure performance: rapid trigger, consistency, stability
• Low to medium sensitivity, very precise movement (strafe / counter-strafe)

⌨️ Current setup I’m considering:
• 60% layout
• ANSI
• Standard spacebar (not split)
• Pre-assembled version
• Aluminium case
• Lekker Tikken switches (stock)

❓ Main questions:
• Does this configuration make sense for competitive FPS?
• Any specific recommendations (case, mounting style, dampening) to maximize in-game stability and feel?
• Any must-have Wootility settings for this type of gameplay?

Thanks in advance for your help 🙏
Looking forward to joining the Wooting ecosystem 🔥

terse locust
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the best one is the one that feels right for you

lusty spoke
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I agree with you, Tony, but I would like to know which one is best on paper in terms of configuration for my use.

terse locust
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i gave you the on paper answer

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because well... it depends on how you interact with the keyboard

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do you bottom out a lot? do you tend to over time rest fingers on keys so they depress? like this is 2 questions out of too many

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its just like with mice. there is no definitive best without knowing stuff on how you interact with the peripheral

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for monitors and PCs this is way easier because you dont really interact with them in the same way like input devices

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for example a "simple" decision of split vs no split spacebar can already make you better at games but not someone else.

lusty spoke
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Hey Tony, thanks for the detailed reply — that makes total sense

Here’s some more context on how I interact with the keyboard:
• I don’t bottom out aggressively. My presses are controlled and I rely more on rapid actuation than full travel.
• I rest my fingers lightly on WASD, but I’m careful with accidental presses — consistency matters more to me than ultra-light tension.
• Low to medium in-game sensitivity, very movement-focused (strafe / counter-strafe heavy in CoD & Battlefield).
• I value stability and predictability over experimentation — I want something that feels reliable under pressure.

Regarding the spacebar:
• I’m leaning toward standard spacebar, mainly for muscle memory and simplicity in FPS.
• I’m open to split only if there’s a clear competitive or comfort benefit for my playstyle.

Based on that, I’d really appreciate your take on:
• switch weight / feel (Lekker Tikken stock or not)
• mounting / dampening choices
• and whether you think split spacebar could realistically help my case, or if standard is the safer call.

Thanks again, really appreciate the insight 👌

terse locust
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mounting/dampening doesnt matter for performance

lusty spoke
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ChatGPT help me for translate 😅

terse locust
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split space is a preference thing. it can give you more keybinds close to your thumb so its not just jump but also some other keys BUT you have to also be able to press jump/the other keys accurately if youre in a pinch and a bit more stressed

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and idk what switch weight you like

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feel wise they are all linear and the main feel difference will be weight for full press and "wobblyness"

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for example here is TenZ (former Valorant ESports pro) actuation points in mm (top left of the keys)

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here the rapid trigger distance (again top left)

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a lot of people would say you need everyting at 0.1mm

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but the truth is the settings should be chosen to fit your muscle memory and playstyle

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a keyboard unlocks potential but wont make you better

lusty spoke
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Thanks, that explanation helps a lot 👌

That confirms what I was feeling already:
• I’ll stick with a standard spacebar — I value reliability under stress more than adding extra thumb binds.
• For switches, I’m fine with linear HE feel, and I care more about stability / reduced wobble than ultra-light full presses.

For actuation & rapid trigger:
• I don’t plan to run everything at 0.1 mm.
• My goal is consistency with my muscle memory, especially for WASD and jump, rather than chasing the lowest numbers.

I’ll probably start with:
• slightly lower actuation on movement keys
• a bit more margin on jump / utility keys
and tune from there once I have playtime on the board.

Really appreciate the insight — this kind of context-driven advice is exactly what I was looking for 👍

terse locust