These Fallout Nuka-Cola artisan keycaps are ridiculous, beautiful, and exactly what your keyboard deserves - Yanko Design
Briefly

These Fallout Nuka-Cola artisan keycaps are ridiculous, beautiful, and exactly what your keyboard deserves - Yanko Design
"Fallout never lets go of Nuka-Cola. You can be ankle deep in irradiated sludge, low on ammo, and still your brain pings when you see that red script on a rusted machine. The games trained everyone to read those machines as little probability engines. Maybe caps, maybe chems, maybe a ghoul behind the door. That association sticks. You see Nuka-Cola now and your fingers almost reach for the VATS key out of habit."
"So when Drop and Dwarf Factory freeze that whole relationship inside a 1U keycap, it feels weirdly logical. Four tiny scenes, all Nuka flavored. Vending machine, bottle crate, Power Armor helmet, Thirst Zapper. Each one parked on an SA R1 profile shell, roughly 18 millimeters across, tall enough to tower over your number row. They are desk jewelry that behaves like keyboard hardware, and that crossover is where this stuff gets interesting."
"The sheer density of the diorama in each cap is something you have to respect. We are talking about a standard 1U footprint, roughly 18 millimeters square, that contains a fully realized scene with foliage, weathering, and legible micro-branding. The clear resin shell acts as a magnifier, giving the internal sculpture a sense of depth that tricks the eye. You can see the undercuts on the vending machine and the individual ropes on the bottle crate."
Nuka-Cola imagery remains strongly evocative, triggering player instincts even in mundane situations. Drop and Dwarf Factory encapsulate that nostalgia into 1U keycaps featuring four micro-dioramas: a vending machine, a bottle crate, a Power Armor helmet, and a Thirst Zapper. Each cap sits on an SA R1 profile shell roughly 18 millimeters across and tall enough to dominate a keyboard's number row. Clear resin domes magnify intricate sculpts that include foliage, weathering, and readable micro-branding. The production uses multi-stage casting to maintain both aesthetic fidelity and the mechanical tolerances required for keyboard stems. The set creates a cohesive miniature narrative across the function row.
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