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Q

press any key to relax.

A cozy PC gaming lounge that sounds like home

“The best sound in the world is your own keyboard.”

KEYCAP is a thirty-station neighborhood computer club where the aisles are named after keyboard rows and nobody rushes you off a seat. Sit in Home Row for company, drop into Numpad with three friends, or vanish into Escape for a quiet solo run.

Try the keys first: CTRL+CHILL

Warm-lit KEYCAP station with dual monitors and hands resting on a mechanical keyboard

The layout

Three zones, named like rows of keys

The floor reads like a keyboard. Pick a row by how loud you want your evening to be — the busy center, the four-seat corner square, or the single quiet key tucked away from everyone.

H
Row of warm wood-panel stations in the busy center of the KEYCAP floor with people playing

HOME_ROW

The center of the room, twelve stations shoulder to shoulder. This is where the chatter lives, where someone always has a spare cable, and where a stranger becomes a duo partner by round two. Linear switches keep the pace up.

  • 12 stations, elbow-close
  • Linear switches, open vibe
N
Four-seat square of stations bathed in soft purple light for a group of friends

NUMPAD

A tidy square of four in the corner, screens angled inward so a squad can call shots without shouting across the room. Book the whole block and it is yours for the night — snacks, a shared board, and one keyboard passed around for the meme rounds.

  • 4 seats, one square
  • Book the block as one
E

ESCAPE

One station in the far corner, angled toward the wall, with the room's most cushioned switches and the good headphones. No mic pressure, no leaderboard glancing over your shoulder — just you, a warm lamp, and a mug of tea if you want it. The quietest key on the board.

  • 1 solo seat, tucked away
  • Silent switches + tea

ALT+TAB OUT OF WORK

Sound & feel

Built around the way a keyboard feels

We tuned this place for the tactile crowd. Every zone runs a different switch feel — snappy linears in Home Row, softer tactiles at Numpad, cushioned silents in Escape — so you sit where your hands are happiest. Headphones on each station block out the aisle without cutting you off from the room. And the test bar by the door holds a dozen boards to click through before you commit to a seat. Come for the games, stay for the thock.

  • 1

    Switches by zone

    Linear, tactile and silent — chosen per aisle, hot-swap boards on request.

  • 2

    Isolating cans

    Closed-back headphones at every seat with a clean 165 Hz-plus display in front of you.

  • 3

    The test bar

    A dozen keyboards on the counter to click, compare and fall for before you sit down.

Rates

Seats priced like a keymap

No memberships to decode, no points to farm. Grab an hour, settle in for an evening, take the whole Numpad square, or hide in Escape with a pot of tea. Pay for the seat, keep the vibe.

1

The Hour

R$ 12/hr

A single key in any open row. Great for a quick match or a lunch-break run.

N

Numpad Block

R$ 130/night

All four corner seats for your squad. Bring the snacks, we bring the extra pads.

E

Escape + Tea

R$ 22/2 hrs

The quiet corner, silent switches, and a fresh pot of tea. Phone on mute, please.

House shortcuts

The rules, mapped to keys you already know

  • CTRL+S

    Save often. Cloud saves are on, but nobody cries over a lost run twice.

  • MUTE

    Voice down after 22:00. The late crowd is winding down — keep the shouting for daylight.

  • DEL

    Trash goes in the bin, cups on the return rack. Leave your key as clean as you found it.

  • CTRL+Z

    Bad round? Undo it with a walk to the tea counter. Reset the hands, reset the head.

From the desk

Notes from the club

  1. 01

    The Frankenboard

    Over a slow winter we built one house keyboard out of donated keycaps — every regular pressed a spare into it. It rattles, the legends do not match, and it lives on the test bar. People still line up to type on it.

  2. 02

    Quiet switch night

    Once a month the whole floor swaps to silent switches after nine. The room drops to a hush of soft thocks and mouse clicks. Newcomers whisper without meaning to. It has become our favorite night of the month.

  3. 03

    A guest fixed the bar

    The wobbly leg on the test bar bugged us for months. A regular showed up one Tuesday with a bracket, a drill and no fuss, and quietly leveled it while their download ran. We named a house keyboard after them.

FAQ.txt

Answers, no scrolling required

Can I bring my own keyboard?

Absolutely — that is half the point. Every station takes a standard USB or wireless board, and there is desk room for a full case with a wrist rest. Bring your own keycaps too; we keep a puller and a spare tray at the counter for quick swaps between rounds.

Are loud switches okay in Home Row?

In Home Row, clack away — that aisle is built for it and the regulars love a good thock. If you want the room's full clatter, that is your row. Prefer to keep it down? Numpad runs softer tactiles, and Escape is silent switches only, so everyone lands where they belong.

Is there lube and tuning on site?

Yes. The test bar doubles as a tinker station with switch lube, a stem holder, films and a couple of screwdrivers. A staff member can walk you through a quick lube job on a spare switch so you hear the difference before touching your daily board. It is free with any seat.

Can I rent a keyboard for the session?

Of course. Ask at the counter and pick a loaner from the test bar — linear, tactile or silent, sized from sixty-percent to full. Rental is included in the Evening and Numpad rates, and a small add-on on the Hour. Return it clean and the tea is on us next time.

Do you stay open late?

We run late Friday and Saturday, closing at 2 am, and to midnight on weeknights. After 22:00 the whole floor goes voice-mute so the night crowd can settle. Escape stays available the whole time for anyone who wants to end the evening on a quiet key.

Book a key

Tell us the day, the row and how long. We will map your seat and hold it — no deposit, no fuss.