Head to head
| Aspect | GMMK Pro | Q1 Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Connection | Wired only | Bluetooth + wired |
| Firmware | QMK-flashable; Glorious software default | QMK/VIA native |
| Sockets | North-facing, 5-pin | South-facing, 5-pin |
| Stock acoustics | Famously needs mods | Good out of the box |
| Parts scene | Very large | Growing |
Who each board suits
The GMMK Pro is a project platform: people buy it planning tape mods, plate swaps, stab tuning and endless switch experiments, supported by years of community guides. The Q1 Pro is for people who want the custom-keyboard result without the project.
Bottom line
As a purchase in isolation, the Q1 Pro wins on completeness. As a hobby entry point with the biggest aftermarket, the GMMK Pro still earns its keep. Decide whether you want a keyboard or a pastime.
The real cost is what happens after checkout
Owners' spending patterns diverge sharply after purchase. Q1 Pro buyers mostly stop at switches and caps. GMMK Pro buyers tend to keep going: aftermarket plates in brass or polycarbonate, replacement stabilizers, gasket swaps, foam kits, alternate knobs. None of it is mandatory, but the board's whole culture nudges you toward it, and the cumulative parts spend on a well-modded GMMK Pro commonly rivals the price of the board itself. If that sounds like fun, it is the point. If it sounds like a tax, the Q1 Pro's ship-it-finished philosophy is the cheaper path even where sticker prices look similar.
Buying either board used
Both have been on the market for years, which makes the used market genuinely good for them. For a GMMK Pro, ask what was modded: a tuned example with fresh stabilizers and a better plate is worth more than stock, while a flashed board with mystery firmware should be reflashed before you trust it. For a Q1 Pro, the checks are simpler: battery health degrades with age like any wireless board, so test unplugged runtime, and confirm the hot-swap sockets by pulling a switch or two. Both boards are heavy; insist on well-packed shipping, since corner dings on aluminum cases are the transit damage owners report most.
If this is your first custom board
A first board rewards forgiveness, and these two forgive differently. The Q1 Pro forgives inexperience: it works well before you learn anything, and every skill you pick up later still applies to it. The GMMK Pro forgives curiosity: years of community guides mean every question you will have already has an answer with photos, which is worth a lot mid-disassembly. The honest tiebreaker is time. If keyboard tinkering is going to be your hobby this year, the GMMK Pro's ecosystem is the better teacher. If the keyboard needs to just work while you do other things, the Q1 Pro is the safer first custom.