Buyers can grab it through Flipkart, Croma, Reliance Digital and Vijay Sales, and it comes in Black,Blue and White. The base 8GB and 128GB version costs the same figure quoted at launch, while the 256GB model runs 38,999 rupees, and Nothing is throwing in a 7.5 percent instant bank discount along with an exchange bonus,which can knock the entry price down closer to 29,999 for buyers who qualify.Under the hood sits a Snapdragon 6 Gen 4 chip, paired with a 6.77 inch AMOLED screen that runs at 120Hz.On the camera side, there's a 50 megapixel main sensor with optical stabilization and an 8 megapixel ultrawide, plus a 16 megapixel selfie camera up front.The Glyph Bar is back too, now built from 45 mini LEDs across five squares on the back, and Nothing says it's up to 40 percent brighter than before. That's a chunky upgrade for something most people will use to check delivery updates.Battery life should hold up fine, since the 6000mAh cell is the biggest Nothing has put in any phone, and it charges at 33W wired. Software runs on Nothing OS 4.1 with Android 16,backed by three years of OS updates and six years of security patches, and the company also dropped the lockscreen ads that annoyed users on the Phone 3a.
It's not alone in this price bracket though.The OnePlus Nord 5 costs less at 33,999 rupees and packs a bigger battery and faster chip, and the Redmi Turbo 5 goes even further with 100W charging for 40,999, and Nothing's own Phone 4a now starts at 39,999 after a recent price hike, leaving a real gap between its two mid range phones.The company is banking on six years of security updates and that glowing back panel to make up the difference.
Comments