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Mechanical keyboards  ·  Wobkey Rainy75

Rainy75: HMX Violet vs Kailh Cocoa switches, which to pick?

It depends
The short answerBoth are smooth factory-lubed linears; the practical difference is feel and tone. Violets run lighter and brighter, Cocoas heavier and deeper. Pick Violet for fast, effortless typing and a poppier sound; pick Cocoa for a more planted feel and the deepest version of the Rainy75's signature thock.

How they differ in hand

  • HMX Violet: light actuation, glassy-smooth travel, a clean poppy bottom-out that keeps the board sounding lively
  • Kailh Cocoa: noticeably firmer spring, slightly muted top, rounder and darker bottom-out that leans into the case's bassiness

Choosing by use

Long writing sessions and fast typists tend to prefer the lighter Violet; heavy-handed typists who bottom out hard often find Cocoas more controlled and less fatiguing in a different way, because the spring pushes back. For pure sound-test aesthetics, Cocoa units are the ones that made the board famous.

The escape hatch

The Rainy75 is hot-swap with standard MX sockets, so this is not a permanent decision. Buy the variant that matches your typing weight, and if you are curious later, a switch pack changes the board's character in twenty minutes.

A three-question decision path

  • Do you bottom out hard? Heavy-handed typists tend to prefer the Cocoa, whose firmer spring pushes back before a harsh landing; light-touch typists get nothing from that spring and enjoy the Violet's effortless travel more.
  • What sold you on the board? If it was sound clips, note that the famous deep recordings are mostly Cocoa builds; a Violet build sounds livelier and brighter than those videos suggest.
  • More typing or more gaming? Long writing days favor lighter springs for fatigue reasons, while for gaming both are ordinary linears and neither carries a real advantage.

What owners report after the first month

Two patterns repeat in owner threads. People who move to the lighter Violet from heavier switches report a brief rise in typos, since resting fingers can actuate a light linear; it fades within a week or two as hands recalibrate. People who pick the Cocoa sometimes report early fatigue impressions in long sessions that settle once their typing stops fighting the spring. Neither pattern is a defect, just adjustment. On maintenance, both arrive factory lubed and consistent, and the community treats them as install-and-forget switches rather than candidates for hand lubing, which is part of why these two headline the board's stock options.

People also ask

Which Rainy75 switch is better for gaming?

Neither has a technical edge; both are conventional linears. Fast, light inputs generally favor the lighter Violet, but that is typing-weight preference, not a performance feature. Rapid-trigger style advantages need a magnetic board, which the Rainy75 is not.

Is the Cocoa version of the Rainy75 quieter than the Violet?

Not exactly quieter, but darker. The Cocoa's slightly muted top and rounder bottom-out read as less sharp in a room, while the Violet is poppier and brighter. Neither is a silent build; for real quiet you would need dedicated silent switches.

Can I switch from Violets to Cocoas later?

Yes. The Rainy75 is hot-swap with standard MX sockets, so a switch pack and about twenty minutes converts one build to the other. Nothing about the choice at checkout is permanent.

Last checked 2026-07-15. Spotted something out of date? The specs change; the answer gets rechecked.