The Guardian (USA)

Nothing Phone 2 review: novel mobile is more than just flashing lights

- Samuel Gibbs Consumer technology editor

The Phone 2 is the latest Android smartphone from Nothing, a Londonbase­d company that specialise­s in good value devices with a novel transparen­t aesthetic.

Costing £579 ($599), it offers top-phone specs for a mid-range price. After the success of its first handset, the Phone 1 last year, Nothing has stuck with its unique design, which takes the classic metal and glass slab of most mobiles and livens them up with a transparen­t back that exposes a series of LED strips.

From the front it looks like most premium phones with a bright, goodlookin­g and smooth 6.7in OLED screen. The aluminium sides are reminiscen­t of the iPhone 12, but the back glass has a gentle curve to it at the edges, which feels more premium compared with Phone 1.

The array of LEDs on the back can be used for more functions than on the Phone 1, and you are now able to adjust brightness automatica­lly and light up in more complex patterns. One strip can be used as a visual countdown timer, another shows charge status and there is even the ability to show progress for activities in third-party apps, but this is now limited to rides in Uber.

You can set various flash patterns for different calls and notificati­ons, with the ability to set them to light up continuous­ly for your most important alerts. There are lots of ring and notificati­on patterns included, but you can easily compose some yourself, which is fun.

The new device will go on sale in the US, as well as the UK and Europe – a first for the company.

Specificat­ions

Screen: 6.7in 120Hz FHD+ OLED (394ppi)

Processor: Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 RAM: 8 or 12GB

Storage: 128, 256 or 512GB

Operating system: Nothing OS 2.0 (Android 13)

Camera: 50MP main and ultrawide, 32MP selfie

Connectivi­ty: 5G, eSIM, wifi 6, NFC, Bluetooth 5.3 and GNSS

Water resistance: IP54 (splash-resistant)

Dimensions: 162.1 x 76.4 x 8.6mm Weight: 201.2g

Year-old but top-end chip

The Phone 2 has a Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 chip, which is Qualcomm’s top model from last year but has since been replaced. That makes it slightly slower than this year’s fastest phones, but quicker than Google’s Pixel 7 and 80% faster than the Phone 1.

The phone is responsive and feels slick. Its battery life is solid, lasting a good 40 hours between charges including five hours of active screen use and four hours on 5G. That is longer than Google’s rival phones of a similar price, but you will still have to charge it every day and a half.

Sustainabi­lity

Nothing says the battery maintains at least 80% of its original capacity for at least 1,000 full charge cycles. The Phone 1 is generally repairable in the UK and the battery is replaceabl­e for about £28 plus labour and shipping by Nothing.

The device is made of recycled aluminium, copper, plastic, steel, tin and other materials accounting for 20% of the phone’s weight. It has a carbon footprint of 53.45kg CO2 equivalent. The company publishes sustainabi­lity reports.

Nothing OS 2.0

Nothing’s take on Android 13 is an interestin­g mix of clutter-free software with some interestin­g quirks, compared with most phones.

It works like any other with gesture navigation, Google Feed and other standard Android bits. But Nothing has added options to make folders of apps bigger, with one-tap access to some of the apps within them. There are four folder designs to choose from including one with just a cover picture of an emoji. You can have standard small folders too, but the large almost widget-like folders are surprising­ly fun and useful.

You can also put any of the quick settings that are usually in the notificati­on shade as different-sized widgets on the home or lockscreen, which is equally useful. The phone has a theme that turns everything monochrome, including most third-party apps with a few red colour accents here and there.

Like the lights on the back of the phone, these little fun additions just add a bit of novelty to the very samey phone experience of competitor­s, but without fundamenta­lly altering how Android works. Disappoint­ingly, Nothing will only support the Phone 2 with three years of Android updates and four years of bimonthly security fixes from release, which is at least a year short of the best and is no longer up to standard.

Camera

The Phone 2 has a similar camera set up to the Phone 1 with two 50-megapixel cameras on the back and a 32MP selfie camera in the screen.

Images captured by all the cameras are generally improved over the phone’s predecesso­r. The main camera shoots good, well-balanced images in bright light as does the wide-angle camera. But as with the Phone 1, photos lack sharpness and detail when viewed at full size, with obvious blurring of moving objects and too much smoothing in more difficult lighting conditions.

The phone has no telephoto camera and the digital zoom leaves a lot to be desired. Video recording was solid for the money with a few fun features to play with including slo-mo up to 480 frames a second.

The Phone 2 produces generally good images but can’t compete with Google’s cheaper Pixel 7.

Price

The Nothing Phone 2 starts at £579 ($599) with 8GB of RAM and 128GB in store on 17 July.

For comparison, the Phone 1 costs £399, the OnePlus 11 costs £729, the Google Pixel 7 costs £499, the Samsung Galaxy S23+ costs £899 and the iPhone 14 Plus costs £949.

Verdict

The Phone 2 is a solid update on its predecesso­r but does not change the core formula of the device. It feels more premium while containing more recycled materials. It has more advanced lights, a significan­tly faster chip and solid battery life, while continuing to undercut much of the competitio­n on price.

It is the novel design across the LED-strewn back and software that is the main draw. There is something very attractive about being a bit different without ruining usability.

The Phone 2 ships with an older chip than its rivals, which may not matter to most, and cannot match the competitio­n on camera. But its biggest weakness is software support — four years of updates from release is simply not good enough anymore, losing it a star.

 ?? ?? Nothing has taken its chic aesthetic further with the Phone 2, with more advanced LEDs and slick software. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian
Nothing has taken its chic aesthetic further with the Phone 2, with more advanced LEDs and slick software. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian
 ?? ?? The phone fully charges in an hour hitting 60% in 29 minutes using a 45W USB-C charger (not included). Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian
The phone fully charges in an hour hitting 60% in 29 minutes using a 45W USB-C charger (not included). Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

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