By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Viral Trending contentViral Trending content
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Gaming News
  • Tech News
  • Travel
Reading: HMD Barbie Phone Review: Plastic Fantastic?
Notification Show More
Viral Trending contentViral Trending content
  • Home
  • Categories
    • World News
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Celebrity
    • Business
    • Crypto
    • Tech News
    • Gaming News
    • Travel
  • Bookmarks
© 2024 All Rights reserved | Powered by Viraltrendingcontent
Viral Trending content > Blog > Tech News > HMD Barbie Phone Review: Plastic Fantastic?
Tech News

HMD Barbie Phone Review: Plastic Fantastic?

By Viral Trending Content 11 Min Read
Share
SHARE
At a glance

Contents
Expert’s RatingProsConsOur Verdict Price When Reviewed Best Prices Today: HMD Barbie Phone Not much under the pink surfaceSimple and substandard cameraWhat is the point?The price tag also takes its tollSpecs

Expert’s Rating

Pros

  • Fun design and accessories
  • Okay battery life

Cons

  • Poor camera, even worse for selfies
  • Tough keypad and text handling
  • Weak screen
  • Not much else of interest

Our Verdict

Who is the HMD Barbie Phone for? It’s too cluttered for a relaxing feature phone, not to mention a bit too expensive. And it’s too late to ride the Barbie movie wave. It lacks features that make it good as a mobile for kids, and it grossly misses out on both camera and sound quality for all of us. The only thing that gets a thumbs up is the battery life, but even that isn’t great.

Price When Reviewed

This value will show the geolocated pricing text for product undefined

Best Pricing Today

Price When Reviewed

129,99 Euro

Best Prices Today: HMD Barbie Phone

As a bearded, 47-year-old, fat bloke who dresses like a 90s grunge troll and likes geeky technology, hockey, beer and rock, I don’t think HMD’s new phone is really meant for me. It’s called Barbie Phone and it’s been released in partnership with the Barbie brand owner Mattel.

It looks like a mobile Barbie had in the film that came out last year, or that came as an accessory if you bought a Barbie doll around the turn of the millennium. It’s bright pink, of course, with Barbie-themed embellishments on the details and a charming flip design that you can open or close with a wrist snap.

The £100 basic phone comes with a plethora of accessories, from Barbie stickers and glittery, self-adhesive ‘crystals’, two extra Barbie-designed shells, and a wristlet-style carrying strap, on which you can hang more of the included Barbie-themed knick-knacks. So you can take your Barbie mobile and easily double the Barbie factor.

HMD Barbie bling
Maximum Barbie factor after some home crafting.

Mattias Inghe

Not much under the pink surface

As a mobile phone, it is highly uninteresting, really. It’s one of HMD’s so-called feature phones, unsmart mobile phones with classic keypads instead of touch, a proprietary system without access to extra apps, minimal memory, and not very many functions or connectivity options.

In fact, it looks to be the HMD Nokia 2660 flip phone from 2022, but with a new shell and a couple of extra Barbie-angled features in the system.

By Barbie-angled, I mean a pastel-coloured lock screen with a Barbie-B in the background, custom-designed pink icons in the function menu, a fake “missed call from Ken” message at startup, beach-themed “Malibu Snake” instead of the usual Snake as the only game, and a comically mistranslated “Barbie mediation” that’s supposed to be a mediation tool. It’s a timer, you get a gong sound when it counts to zero. That’s about it.

The range of functions in the phone is otherwise the same as in most of HMD’s simpler feature phones. Calls, contact book, SMS, calendar you can’t sync with anything, clock with alarm, calculator, converter for units of measurement and currencies, voice memo app, FM radio, picture gallery for actual photos and video player for actual films.

HMD Barbie i handen
The screen is neither bright nor high-resolution, but at least it has wide viewing angles.

Mattias Inghe

Simple and substandard camera

The problem with the photo features is that the camera is downright lousy. at 0.3 megapixels, it produces 640 x 480 pixels at best. And even those pixels are distressingly blurry, smeared in detail and both pale and mottled in colour. Filming becomes even more depressing.

You only get one camera, on the back. So taking a selfie means turning on a ten-second timer, folding your phone, turning it over and hoping for the best. There’s a glossy mirror on the outside to help you aim, but it’s probably most useful for checking that your lipstick and eyeliner are in the right place. The mirror is actually semi-transparent and has a small screen built in that shows the time and date. It’s kind of cool, anyway.

You can actually access the web via a 4G connection (wifi not available) with an Opera Mini browser. Some sites actually load in them. I can Google, read some news sites and check the weather. But trying to access my email through it, for example, is nigh on impossible. It’s for advanced and active types of sites.

HMD Barbie webbläsare
The only internet feature is this compact browser. Sure, it can load sites but not nicely.

Mattias Inghe

What is the point?

How Barbie does this feel? In everything but the surface, not very Barbie at all. Mattel’s own dolls are, nowadays at least, supposed to give girl power vibes with Barbies in successful professional roles, but this is a mobile that wasn’t even good enough to be used for that at the beginning of the millennium.

Last year’s film was an unexpectedly enjoyable satirical comedy about gender roles and consumerism, but it seems HMD didn’t see it, or misunderstood it completely. Even Barbie deserves to be taken seriously, but this one feels made by a misogynistic Ken. Surely it should at least be possible to take a decent selfie and post it on social media, in 2024. And read a bloody email.

Is this just me hating on feature phones? Most of us abandoned dumbphones when the iPhone came along and paved the way for today’s era of smartphones, with real screens, qwerty keyboards, connectivity and apps. But some have found their way back to these more feature-poor phones, for nostalgia or to escape the stress of being constantly online.

HMD also sells them as a ‘relaxation’ option. “A phone without distractions”. But there goes the nostalgia factor of the Nokia classics, and I’m more distracted by the fact that I can’t even comfortably type a short text message without wanting to throw the phone at the wall, glitter and all. Is there anything else that can make a simpler mobile a winner? Maybe battery life, but it’s only long because there’s not much to do actively that can drain the battery. Call time on most smartphones is actually clearly better.

HMD Barbie spegel
What am I doing? Have I aimed the camera right for a selfie? Has the mirror deformed my skull or do I look like that? (that was the mirror)

Mattias Inghe

The price tag also takes its toll

For example, I’m frantically looking in settings menus, in the accompanying manual and online (on another mobile) for some way to set the text input from a frustratingly misinterpreting auto-corrector to multi-press mode, without success.

The tediously spongy buttons don’t make me happy either. There is actually a better HMD Barbie, with a faster processor, more memory, Wi-Fi, 5Mp camera and a smart system of apps. But only in the US which is a shame.

HMD wants £100 for this mobile, a price you can get a proper budget smartphone for instead. HMD’s Nokia 2660 which is basically the same mobile but not Barbie-branded, costs just £64.99.

Is a pink shell and some bling worth almost double that? Hardly. Even many slightly cheaper smartwatches today can handle text input, messaging and communication in a significantly better way than HMD Barbie. And they don’t cost any more.

HMD Barbie system
Paper-thin Barbie angle on features and systems.

Mattias Inghe

And I doubt any kid will be happy about this mobile that can’t do what a mobile should be able to unless they are a Barbie superfan. You can’t take decent pictures, listen to music without file transfer via USB, or send a message to the family WhatsApp group.

If you’re thinking about a feature phone to keep your daughter safe from online threats, there are great parental control tools for real smartphones instead. For example, HMD’s excellent Skyline, which is also available in cheery pink.

If I feel like I want to affirm my or someone else’s inner Barbie, I’d rather get one, go to the nearest store and get a bunch of my own Barbie stickers to print there, and download an Android launcher with a pink princess theme. Is it available? I’m sure there is.

Specs

  • Manufacturer: HMD
  • System circuit: Unisoc T107, Cortex-A7 1 GHz
  • Memory: 64 MB
  • Storage: 128 MB, microSD slot
  • Display: 2.8-inch LCD, 240 x 320 pixels
  • Camera: 0.3Mp with rear LED
  • Connections: USB-C 2.0, 3.5 mm headset
  • Communication: 4G, Bluetooth 5.0, FM radio
  • Operating system: S30 with Barbie UI
  • Other: Dual sim, shell and carrying strap
  • Battery: 1 450 mAh, about 10 hours of talk time
  • Size: 10.84 x 5.51 x 1.89cm
  • Weight: 124g

This article originally appeared on our sister publication M3 and was translated and adapted from Swedish.

You Might Also Like

TeamPCP Hacks Checkmarx GitHub Actions Using Stolen CI Credentials

Why cybersecurity needs to adapt in the age of AI

A School District Tried to Help Train Waymos to Stop for School Buses. It Didn’t Work

Google Pixel 10a Review: This is Fine

Galaxy Z Fold 8 vs. Z Fold 8 Wide: What’s the Difference?

TAGGED: cool tech, latest technology, latest technology news, new technology, science and technology, tech, Tech News, tech review, technews, technological advances, technology definition, technology reviews, what is technology
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link
Previous Article US banking giants capture biggest share of industry profits since 2015
Next Article Two Point Museum Trailer Outlines Experts, Expeditions, and Exhibits
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Latest News

TeamPCP Hacks Checkmarx GitHub Actions Using Stolen CI Credentials
Tech News
Why cybersecurity needs to adapt in the age of AI
Tech News
Is Europe sleepwalking into its worst gas crisis since 2022?
Business
Pope Leo XIV decries the widening gap between the rich and poor in historic Monaco visit
World News
How Much Bitcoin Has Bhutan Sold This Year? Arkham Updates 2026 Figure After Latest Move
Crypto
Tiger Woods’ Net Worth: How Much Money the Golf Player Has Today
Celebrity
Halo: Campaign Evolved Involves ODSTs, Brutes and New Covenant Faction in Prequel Missions – Rumor
Gaming News

About Us

Welcome to Viraltrendingcontent, your go-to source for the latest updates on world news, politics, sports, celebrity, tech, travel, gaming, crypto news, and business news. We are dedicated to providing you with accurate, timely, and engaging content from around the globe.

Quick Links

  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Gaming News
  • Tech News
  • Travel
  • Sports
  • Crypto
  • Tech News
  • Gaming News
  • Travel

Trending News

cageside seats

Unlocking the Ultimate WWE Experience: Cageside Seats News 2024

TeamPCP Hacks Checkmarx GitHub Actions Using Stolen CI Credentials

Investing £5 a day could help me build a second income of £329 a month!

cageside seats
Unlocking the Ultimate WWE Experience: Cageside Seats News 2024
May 22, 2024
TeamPCP Hacks Checkmarx GitHub Actions Using Stolen CI Credentials
March 29, 2026
Investing £5 a day could help me build a second income of £329 a month!
March 27, 2024
Brussels unveils plans for a European Degree but struggles to explain why
March 27, 2024
© 2024 All Rights reserved | Powered by Vraltrendingcontent
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?