The WeAct Blackpill is a popular choice for handwired boards, as it offers a powerful micro controller, USB Type C, a good number of pins to use, and a large amount of firmware space. All for a ~$6 USD price tag.
While the Blackpill is a great choice to use in your keyboard, there are a number of caveats in regards to using them. The first is that a number of exposed pins cannot be used, or have special considerations/hardware tweaks that are required for proper operation.
* Pin `A9` is meant for VBUS Sense and should not be used, if it can be avoided. It has an internal pull-down resistor, which may cause issues with usage. However, a pull-up resistor can work (~5.1k), but should be avoided.
* Pin `A10` can be used, but should be avoided. Any connection on this pin can prevent the bootloader from entering the proper mode for DFU flashing. A pull-up resistor (~22k) on this pin fixes the bootloader issue.
* Pin `A0` is shared with the User Key (button) on the controller. It can be used.
* Pin `C13` is shared with the onboard LED indicator, and is connected to +3.3V. This can be used, but may cause the LED to blink intermittently, depending on activity on the pin.
* Pins `A4`, `A5`, `A6` and `A7` are used by the SOI8 footprint on the back of the controller, that can be used for either an SPI Flash chip, or an SPI EEPROM chip. `A4` is the Chip Select pin, and cannot be shared. However, `A5`, `A6`, and `A7` are the `SCK`, `MISO`, and `MOSI` pins, respectively, and can be shared with other SPI devices.
* Pins `C13`, `C14`, and `C15` have limits on output current. They should be used only as input, e.g., they should not be used for row pins in COL2ROW matrix configurations, but can be used as column pins.
* This is because the column pins (in COL2ROW) are pulled up (the pull-up strength is independent of the current sourcing limitation) and the ROW is driven low and sinks current, then we check the state of the COLs to look for keypresses.
There is [tinyuf2 support for the WeAct Blackpill](https://github.com/adafruit/tinyuf2/tree/master/ports/stm32f4/boards/stm32f411ce_blackpill). Instructions on how to compile the bootloader can be found [here](https://github.com/adafruit/tinyuf2#build-and-flash). Setting `BOOTLOADER = tinyuf2` will enable support for this user bootloader, and the correct configuration to prevent it from being overwritten when flashing firmware.