Nothing Phone (1) review

Fill lights, OIS, and a 50MP camera make the Nothing Phone (1) a mighty midrange option for photography enthusiasts

A photo of the Nothing Phone (1)
(Image: © Basil Kronfli / Digital Camera World)

Digital Camera World Verdict

The Nothing Phone (1) is a very good phone for the price, and packs features missing in much of its competition – wireless charging, a dynamic screen refresh rate, and most notably, unique, standout style. If you want the Glyph lights to change your life – they won't. They do help the phone's design edge ahead, though, and the fact its core user experience is strong must be commended. Most impressive is the camera though – it takes brands years to hone their camera software, and Nothing's pulled together some mighty image processing first time around. Yes, the battery life could be better, and a telephoto camera wouldn't have hurt either. Nevertheless, the Nothing Phone (1) is still a standout smartphone for the price.

Pros

  • +

    Great camera for the price

  • +

    Novel and playful design

  • +

    A fully-featured package

  • +

    Wireless charging

Cons

  • -

    Battery life could be better

  • -

    Doesn't pack best-in-class power

  • -

    No headphone jack

Why you can trust Digital Camera World Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing products and services so you can choose the best for you. Find out how we test.

It's quite a feat to make a brand new smartphone like the Nothing Phone (1). By new, we mean totally new – no established holding company (that we know of) working behind the scenes to ensure success or absorb the cost of failure. In fact, we've not seen a successful new entrant to the smartphone market hit headlines for years. What about Poco, Realme and Redmi – they're all new and independent, right? Wrong. All are backed by bigger brands – Oppo and Xiaomi

Truly new, indie brands like Essential and Fxtec historically launch, land, then sink. Essential is probably the most alarming cautionary tale, given it had a co-creator of Android at the helm and still failed. So why should you invest your time, long-term memory capacity, and money in Nothing and its Phone (1)?

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Basil Kronfli

Basil Kronfli is a freelance technology journalist, consultant, and content creator. He trained in graphic design and started his career at Canon Europe before moving into journalism. Basil is also experienced in video production, independently running the YouTube channel TechEdit, and during his time at Future, he worked alongside the Digital Camera World team as a senior video producer.