Nothing Phone 2A Review: Flashy Good Deal!
Summary
TLDRIn this video, the narrator delves into the world of budget smartphones, specifically reviewing the Nothing Phone (2A). With a unique transparent design and a focus on providing the 'Nothing phone experience' at a lower price point, the Phone (2A) is dissected for its strengths and compromises. The narrator examines its impressive battery life, smooth software experience, and decent camera performance, while acknowledging trade-offs in areas like raw specs and build quality. Ultimately, the video positions the Nothing Phone (2A) as a compelling budget option that delivers a well-rounded experience without sacrificing too many features found in flagship models.
Takeaways
- ð The Nothing Phone (2A) aims to be the most visually appealing budget phone at $350, with a unique transparent design and customizable LED lights.
- ð It offers impressive battery life with a 5000mAh battery and 45W wired charging, despite being a budget device.
- ð» The MediaTek Dimensity 7200 Pro chip provides respectable performance for everyday tasks, though it may struggle with intensive gaming.
- ð± The 6.7-inch AMOLED display with 120Hz refresh rate and 1300 nits peak brightness is excellent for the price point.
- ðš While not exceptional, the cameras are serviceable for basic photography needs and can capture decent photos and videos.
- ð The Nothing OS 2.5 software experience is smooth and bloat-free, with unique aesthetic elements like dots and customizable widgets.
- ð Software features from the flagship Nothing Phone are mostly retained, offering a premium experience on a budget device.
- ð Nothing promises three years of Android updates, making it a potentially good long-term budget option.
- â¡ Compared to the older Nothing Phone 1, the 2A offers several improvements like a larger display, better battery, and faster charging.
- ð€ Overall, the Nothing Phone (2A) strikes a balance between affordability and a distinctive design/software experience for budget smartphone users.
Q & A
What is the main focus of the video?
-The video is a review of the Nothing Phone 2A, a budget-friendly smartphone from the company Nothing.
What is the standout feature of the Nothing Phone 2A according to the review?
-The standout feature of the Nothing Phone 2A is its unique and visually interesting design, featuring a transparent back with LED lights and a PCB-inspired aesthetic.
How does the reviewer describe the performance of the Nothing Phone 2A?
-The reviewer describes the performance as respectable for a budget phone. While not winning any benchmark tests, the phone is snappy and smooth for everyday use like messaging, web browsing, and taking pictures, thanks to the optimized software.
What are some of the software features and customization options mentioned in the review?
-The review highlights features like the dots aesthetic throughout the UI, customizable widgets, a glass effect for wallpapers, AI-generated wallpapers, third-party icon pack support, and the glyph lights on the back for notifications and music visualization.
How does the reviewer assess the camera performance of the Nothing Phone 2A?
-The reviewer acknowledges that the cameras are not exceptional but serviceable for basic photography needs like capturing moments, document scanning, and video calls.
What does the reviewer appreciate about the software experience on the Nothing Phone 2A compared to other budget phones?
-The reviewer appreciates that most of the software features and experiences from the more expensive Nothing phones are retained in the budget-friendly 2A, without many artificial cuts or limitations.
How does the Nothing Phone 2A compare to the older Nothing Phone 1 in terms of hardware and features?
-According to the review, the Nothing Phone 2A has a bigger, brighter screen with thinner bezels, a larger battery with faster charging, a higher processor clock speed, a higher-resolution front camera, and a wider variety of refresh rates compared to the older Nothing Phone 1.
What is the overall verdict of the reviewer regarding the Nothing Phone 2A?
-The overall verdict is that the Nothing Phone 2A is a good, solid, all-around budget phone that offers a unique design and a good software experience for its price point.
What is the price point of the Nothing Phone 2A mentioned in the review?
-The Nothing Phone 2A is priced at $350, according to the review.
Does the review mention any potential drawbacks or trade-offs with the Nothing Phone 2A?
-Yes, the review mentions that the phone has a plastic back instead of glass, a plastic frame instead of aluminum, and lacks features like wireless charging and an IP68 rating for water resistance, which are trade-offs to achieve the budget pricing.
Outlines
ð± The Nothing Phone (1) - An Unconventional Budget Smartphone
This paragraph introduces the Nothing Phone (1), a budget smartphone that stands out with its unique and transparent design. The phone aims to offer an appealing package by making trade-offs in certain areas to keep the price affordable. It highlights the phone's distinctive look, featuring a transparent back, a dual camera setup resembling eyes, LED lights, and an asymmetrical design inspired by the New York City subway map. The paragraph also mentions dbrand's 'Something' skins that mimic the Nothing Phone's aesthetic for other devices.
ð Performance, Software, and Camera Capabilities
The second paragraph delves into the performance, software, and camera capabilities of the Nothing Phone (1). It discusses the MediaTek Dimensity 7200 Pro chipset, which surprises with its respectable real-world performance despite modest benchmark scores. The phone runs on Nothing OS 2.5, based on Android 14, providing a clean and smooth user experience. The cameras are described as serviceable, with a new 50-megapixel primary camera, an ultra-wide camera, and a selfie camera inherited from the previous model. While not exceptional, the cameras are deemed sufficient for everyday needs like capturing moments, document scanning, and video calls.
ð¡ Software Features and Overall Impressions
The third paragraph focuses on the software features and overall impressions of the Nothing Phone (1). It highlights the phone's unique aesthetic elements, such as the dot patterns throughout the interface, customizable widgets, and animations. Additionally, it mentions features like the glyph countdown timer, music visualization, and fill flash. The paragraph acknowledges that some features may be gimmicky but appreciates Nothing's efforts to provide the full software experience from their flagship phones on this budget device. Overall, the Nothing Phone (1) is praised as a solid and promising budget smartphone, with the potential for long-term software support and a good overall experience for its price point.
Mindmap
Keywords
ð¡Budget phones
ð¡Trade-offs
ð¡Aesthetic
ð¡Software experience
ð¡Battery life
ð¡Performance
ð¡Camera
ð¡Features
ð¡Updates
ð¡Budget
Highlights
Budget phones are fun because you will find the thing they had to cut corners on to be a budget phone, and it's a matter of picking the one that makes the trade-offs you're okay with.
The Nothing Phone (2A) is the designer budget phone, aiming to be the prettiest $350 phone with its transparent aesthetic and unique design.
The phone has a huge 6.7-inch AMOLED display with variable refresh rate up to 120Hz, and impressive features like 2160Hz PWM dimming for a budget device.
Battery life is a major strength, with a massive 5000mAh battery and 45W wired charging, despite being a budget phone.
The MediaTek Dimensity 7200 Pro chip performed better than expected, providing respectable performance for everyday use, despite not being flagship-level.
Nothing OS 2.5 on Android 14 offers a clean, bloat-free, and smooth software experience, reminiscent of the old OnePlus Magic.
The phone's design incorporates unique elements like the dots aesthetic, thin font, customizable widgets, and glyph lights for notifications and music visualization.
The cameras are serviceable and can take passable pictures, but they are not the main selling point of this budget device.
The phone retains many features from the more expensive Nothing phones, such as advanced camera settings and experimental features, without artificial cuts typical of budget phones.
The Nothing Phone (2A) offers improvements over the older Nothing Phone 1, such as a bigger, brighter screen, larger battery, faster charging, and higher-resolution front camera.
Overall, the Nothing Phone (2A) is a good, solid, all-around budget phone that promises three years of Android updates and is expected to be a good budget option for the next couple of years.
Transcripts
(cube bounces)
(electronic crackling)
- Budget phones are fun,
because, pretty much with all of them,
if you poke around hard enough,
you will find the thing that they had to cut corners on,
you'll find the thing that they trimmed back
to get it to be a budget phone.
And so for picking one for you, it's just a matter
of picking the one that makes the trade offs
that you're okay with.
Like maybe you love,
you gotta have good build quality and cameras.
Well then, iPhone SE is probably a good one for you.
And then you know you're not gonna get a great screen
or battery life or things like that.
Or maybe you gotta have a great big screen.
Samsung makes the Galaxy A54.
Ar maybe you gotta have good software and cameras.
Pixel 7A.
This phone is 350 bucks.
And this, this is the designer one.
(sophisticated electro-jazz music)
(electronic crackling)
So, this phone is not going to win anyone over
with raw specs.
It's not gonna win by having the best camera
or the best battery life of any budget phone.
The performance isn't gonna blow you outta the water,
but you could definitely argue
that it's the prettiest $350 phone.
So Nothing has had this transparent aesthetic going
for a while with their phones,
and then also the earbuds.
This one definitely also has that.
There's also a white version of this.
I think it looks better, it also has like black buttons,
so it's kinda this nice contrast,
but, you know, dark version looks cool too.
And honestly if the mission is to look like a Nothing phone,
and not be mistaken for anything else,
then, yeah, mission definitely accomplished.
The dual cameras in the middle and near the top
is pretty unique.
Kinda like a pair of eyes maybe.
And the NFC coil actually surrounds the cameras.
Then there are three bars of LEDs making a glyph design
around the camera circle again.
Then it's kinda this split design,
the bottom half is like a PCB-inspired look,
apparently inspired by the New York City subway map.
And Nothing's already shown people this,
like there's been some reactions to the design already.
Some people love it, some people actually hate it.
I don't know, it's a bit asymmetrical,
so it's unconventional for sure, but I think it's nice,
not gonna lie.
But even if you don't like it, at least you can say
it's at least somewhat visually interesting.
You know, there's some textures, there's some exposed screws
and some text and that little red square,
it's not functional, it's just purely to look cool,
so, I appreciate that.
And if you do like this look
but have maybe a more boring phone
that you're not willing to give up,
then channel sponsor dbrand
has you covered with their Something skins.
So if you haven't heard of it already,
dbrand has performed some,
and these are their words, not mine,
"Creative plagiarism" on Nothing's whole design language,
both in light mode and dark mode,
so I'll leave a link below if you wanna check those out.
But guess what?
It's an extremely competitive price bracket,
so you get a good looking phone,
but you still will have to make some sacrifices to get it.
So first of all, it's clear plastic, not glass, at the back.
Which, you know,
I'm sure Zach will get to this phone at some point,
but I think it'll be easier to scuff and scratch,
but harder to shatter, like glass would be,
so, but I think it's a reasonable trade off.
It's also a textured plastic frame as well,
so it looks like aluminum,
but it's this plastic all the way around the phone,
to the point where this phone actually ends up feeling
surprisingly light in the hand for how big it is.
But we should just get to that,
this is a huge, it's a jumbo-sized phone, it's gigantic.
Some people might not love that,
but I think a lotta people like really big screens,
and you get the natural advantages
that come with a big phone,
which is a big battery and a big screen.
So this is a relatively giant 6.7-inch display
corner to corner.
It's literally ultra phone size.
And it gets pretty bright too,
so definitely not flagship bright,
'cause we have some crazy numbers these days,
but 1300 knits peak brightness
is very visible in bright indoor lighting,
and bezels are even
all the way around the front of the phone,
so, aesthetically, I have no complaints.
And then even at this price, it's AMOLED,
it has an optical fingerprint reader under the glass.
Its variable refresh rate up to 120 hertz.
And it even has 2160 hertz PWM dimming.
So if you don't like the back of this phone,
at least the front of it,
that you're actually looking at all the time,
is pretty impressive for 350 bucks.
But I'd say an even bigger strength to this phone
is battery life.
So battery always comes from three main things, basically,
obviously having a huge physical battery.
Also good software and an efficient chip.
We'll get to the software.
But, this phone has a 5000-milliamp hour battery,
that's literally bigger
than their flagship phones from Nothing,
so, really big battery.
It doesn't have wireless charging,
but it does have 45-watt wire charging.
Which is pretty good, that's zero to full in an hour.
And the chip it's running is this little thing
called the MediaTek Dimensity 7200 Pro.
So, this was my biggest question mark, actually,
going into testing this phone,
'cause, you know how Nothing
teases the specs and stuff ahead of time.
So we find out it's a MediaTek chip,
and I'm not sure if this one's going to perform
the way I've been used to some other phones,
like they're showcasing all these, you know,
specifically handpicked benchmarks results,
of course they will, but conveniently, they only compare it
to a two-year-old Nothing Phone 1
which had that mid-range, 778G Plus from Qualcomm.
Now, I'm not expecting flagship stuff for 350 bucks,
but like, what's it gonna land at,
this feels like a make or break part of the phone.
And I've been pleasantly surprised.
Now, it's not gonna win any prizes with raw specs,
and I definitely don't think it'll earn anybody's money
with the benchmark scores alone,
you look at those numbers,
you're like "Okay, not a total shock here."
But as far as actual performance, when you use the phone,
the way I'd put it is, it's respectable,
and I really feel like that is a testament to the software,
and how well it's working together.
So, at this point we're on Nothing OS 2.5,
on top of Android 14.
And you already have seen Nothing Phone software
with the dots and the aesthetic and all that stuff,
but, it's clean, there's no bloat wear,
and there is a solid focus on fast and smooth,
it kinda feels like a throwback
to the old OnePlus Magic back in the day.
But with regular use, this phone is quite smooth and snappy.
Sometimes a fingerprint reader shudders a little bit,
like when you're first unlocking,
but for the most part,
if you're just using the phone doing stuff like messaging
or flipping through a couple apps, email, web browsing,
taking your pictures, this is a smooth phone.
It's pretty similar to what they did
with the Nothing Phone 1, with this 778.
It's very solid with everyday use,
and the second you try to do super high-end stuff,
like gaming,
then you'll see where the benchmarks come up short,
where you start dropping frames and all that.
But, again, this is a $350 phone
and I am definitely not complaining about that.
Now Nothing has had some time now
to build up their aesthetic and their identity
and what they really want a Nothing phone to be.
And I gotta say, they have a lot of unique,
really identifiable things going on here
that you may like or dislike, but they're all here.
So aesthetically they've got the dots everywhere.
So the stock apps have this dots aesthetic,
and the thin font to go with it.
The back arrow in Android is made of these dots.
And they have this extensive built-out selection
of Nothing widgets now,
most of them with the dots theme as well,
so you can have this very consistent home screen aesthetic.
And then there's other little stuff,
like you can enlarge a single app icon
to fill up four spots on your home screen
for a unique home screen grid.
I don't know, you might be into that.
There's also this nice little animation
with the folders on the home screen.
Also this new thing which lets you add a glass effect
to your wallpaper,
so it's blurred behind your home screen
for better visibility, I actually really like that.
There's also AI wallpapers now,
so you can jump into the wallpaper studio
and create the most soulless combo art
the world has ever seen in just a few taps.
There's also third-party icon pack support
on the home screen, with instant one-touch previews.
And then of course the glyphs.
So, this phone still has some lights on the back,
it's less lights that the flagship, than the phone two,
but, about the same amount of functionality.
So there's one vertical light on the right,
and a small one down here on the bottom left,
and then the big top one arcing around the top left.
This is the one that works with the glyph countdown timer.
Maybe you'll find that useful.
The blinking notification glyph when your phone is down,
I still wish I could just customize it a little bit more,
I know they don't wanna do RGB, but if this was RGB,
I would totally have different colors
light up for different app notifications
and I would go to town with that, but, you know,
it still works with just white lights.
And it also does music visualizations
to sync up with any music coming out of the speaker,
so...
(phone plays electro-R&B music)
I don't know.
Sure.
Obviously some of this stuff is gimmicks.
Some of this you may find useful like once or twice,
I almost never use the countdown clock,
but the one time I use it, it's kinda cool.
Side note, I couldn't get the glyph composer
to work at all on this phone.
The UI worked,
but it didn't light up the lights on the back.
But you know, on super closeup photos,
maybe the glyph fill flash is decently useful sometimes,
useless other times.
But hey, while we're on the subject, the camera.
The cameras on the back here are serviceable,
like, it's just practical
to have cameras on the back of your phone,
and these, they're not good, but, they're fine.
I always feel like we go into budget phone reviews
kinda knowing, okay,
this isn't gonna have cameras that blow me away,
it's not gonna be as interesting to test these,
but, you gotta test 'em anyway and see what they're made of,
so, this has a different
new 50-megapixel primary camera on the back,
and then it has the same ultra-wide camera
as the Nothing phone too,
and actually also the same selfie camera.
And look, it can take okay pictures.
Alright, passable pictures.
I know 50 megapixels is a big number,
but, here's what I'll say:
at this level, even in great lighting,
the photos aren't particularly sharp.
The dynamic range or depth of field aren't amazing.
Like, you're not buying this phone
to take the greatest most artistic photos and videos
the world has ever seen.
But, what you do need is for it to be serviceable,
to be quick enough for autofocus to work,
for it to capture a moment, document scanning, video calls,
sharing photos with people.
And it does all that, and it's totally fine,
and I can't complain.
And really what's left a bigger imprint on me using this
is that, compared to their other flagship phones,
almost all of the features are still here.
Like the only one I'm not actually seeing
on this budget version of the phone is macro mode.
And that, that theme of keeping a lotta the stuff
from the more expensive phones
and not doing these artificial cuts,
that's what feels good about this phone as a budget phone,
to me, it actually feels like they're trying to give people
all of the Nothing phone experience for less money.
Now, we definitely can't say it's one-to-one,
there's obviously cuts, especially with hardware,
Like there's no wireless charging, like I said.
It's IP54 instead of IP68.
It's plastic instead of glass and aluminum.
But, I like that once you start to get to use the phone,
especially with the software features, experience wise,
I don't feel nearly as many artificial-feeling cuts
as we've seen on other phones.
Like there's no pro mode in the camera
that's missing from the budget phone.
All the same advanced settings, the experimental features,
all the home screen features with Nothing OS,
it's all here, on this cheaper phone.
And the crazy part to me is,
they obviously wanna compare this to a lower-end phone,
so they compare it to the Phone 1,
and my natural instinct is like, "I'm ignoring that,
"of course they're comparing it to the old phone."
But when, you actually look at that 2-year-old phone,
you kinda see how far they've come.
And you look at the things
that are actually better about this budget phone.
This Nothing Phone 2A has a bigger, brighter screen,
with thinner bezels.
It has a larger battery, with faster charging,
a higher-processor clock speed,
a higher-resolution front camera,
and a wider variety of refresh rates than the Phone 1.
Like, no wonder they wanna show us the Phone 1.
But, in general, if you're looking for the TLDW,
yes, this is a good, solid, all-around budget phone.
And the way Nothing has been tracking with software,
it appears, I mean they're promising
three years of Android updates with this phone.
I think this will be a good budget phone to own
for the next couple years.
Well done, Nothing.
Well done.
Thanks for watching.
Catch you guys in the next one.
Base.
5.0 / 5 (0 votes)