The battery is a 5,200mAh cell. That's the largest battery Nothing has shipped on any of its phones so far. Under the hood sits Qualcomm's Snapdragon 6 Gen 4,built on a 4nm process, and it lands right between the older Phone 3a Lite and the pricier Phone 4a in raw power.Didn't expect a downclocked chip to feel this snappy in daily use, honestly.The 6.77 inch OLED screen runs at 120Hz and hits 2000 nits at its brightest, and the back still shows off that four white LED, one red LED Glyph Bar that Nothing fans already know from the 4a.On the camera side, there's a 50MP main sensor with optical stabilization, an 8MP ultrawide, and a 16MP selfie camera up front. Charging tops out at 33W, going from zero to half full in about 27 minutes, and the phone carries an IP64 rating, so light rain or a splash at the sink won't hurt it, though Nothing says it survived 20 minutes submerged under 25cm of water during testing.
Pricing lands at €330, £300, and ₹35,000 for the base 8GB and 128GB version, with an 8GB and 256GB model in India priced at ₹38,699.In India, bank discounts and exchange offers bring the effective price down to about ₹29,999 for the base model.Nothing promises three years of Android updates and six years of security patches, longer than most phones at this price bother offering.It comes in white, black, and blue, with a red option kept for India only, and there's no US release planned, no headphone jack either.
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