Nokia 3110

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  • Nokia 3110

    💎 Rarity Index: D (Very Common)

    ⭐ WOW Factor: The first Nokia phone to feature the Navi-Key (a.k.a. D-Pad)

    👁 Evaluation in my collection: Great – 9.8/10

    ⏱ Life timer: NA | 📦 Boxed: YES

    📅 Release Year: 1997 | 💰 Release Price: N/A

    📊 Units Sold: ~8M


    📰 Why this phone matters: The 3110 is a GSM mobile phone handset manufactured by Nokia in Hungary, introduced at CEBIT in March 1997.The 3110 is notable as the first Nokia handset to feature the ‘Navi-Key’ (a.k.a. D-Pad) menu navigation system. The Navi-Key was featured heavily on Nokia handsets, especially the entry-level models such as the Nokia 1100 in the following years. Unlike its successor, the 3210, and subsequent handsets of similar design, the 3110 had an external antenna. The phone was available with a slim, standard or vibrating battery. It could only be used on a GSM-900 network.
    The 3110 shared the platform and accessories of the Nokia 8110 “banana phone”.
    The model number was reused by Nokia in 2007 when the company launched the Nokia 3110 classic. The 3110 Classic sports a candybar form factor similar to that of the 3110, but adds modern features such as Bluetooth, camera functionality, audio and video playback and recording, and packet data over EDGE, in addition to tri-band functionality.
    Unlike subsequent 3000 series mobile phones, its display is not PCD8544 based. This is a special edition made for VW AG, it has red light and LI ION battery

    📝 Reviews when released: N/A 💔

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  • Nokia 3110 Orange

    💎 Rarity Index: B (Uncommon)

    ⭐ WOW Factor: The first Nokia phone to feature the Navi-Key (a.k.a. D-Pad)

    👁 Evaluation in my collection: Good – 9/10

    ⏱ Life timer: NA | 📦 Boxed: NO

    📅 Release Year: 1997 | 💰 Release Price: N/A

    📊 Units Sold: ~8M


    📰 Why this phone matters: The 3110 is a GSM mobile phone handset manufactured by Nokia in Hungary, introduced at CEBIT in March 1997.The 3110 is notable as the first Nokia handset to feature the ‘Navi-Key’ (a.k.a. D-Pad) menu navigation system. The Navi-Key was featured heavily on Nokia handsets, especially the entry-level models such as the Nokia 1100 in the following years. Unlike its successor, the 3210, and subsequent handsets of similar design, the 3110 had an external antenna. The phone was available with a slim, standard or vibrating battery. It could only be used on a GSM-900 network.
    The 3110 shared the platform and accessories of the Nokia 8110 “banana phone”.
    The model number was reused by Nokia in 2007 when the company launched the Nokia 3110 classic. The 3110 Classic sports a candybar form factor similar to that of the 3110, but adds modern features such as Bluetooth, camera functionality, audio and video playback and recording, and packet data over EDGE, in addition to tri-band functionality.
    Unlike subsequent 3000 series mobile phones, its display is not PCD8544 based. This is a special edition made for VW AG, it has red light and LI ION battery

    📝 Reviews when released: N/A 💔

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  • Nokia 3810: The Lost Asian Shadow of the 3110

    💎 Rarity Index: S (Ultra Rare)

    ⭐ WOW Factor: A true APAC-market ghost model, the Nokia 3810 exists as a secret evolution of the 3110, built on a unique NHE-8A hardware branch, sold only through selected Asian operators, and so rare today that even many hardcore collectors have never seen a real one outside archival photos.

    👁 Evaluation in my collection: Good – 8.5/10

    ⏱ Life timer: NA | 📦 Boxed: NO

    📅 Release Year: 1998 | 💰 Release Price: ~11000 PHP

    📊 Units Sold: ~1M


    📰 Why this phone matters: Nokia 3810 is one of the most obscure and region-locked handsets Nokia ever released, a model that at first sight looks like a Nokia 3110 from the late 90s, but in reality is a completely different device built specifically for the Southeast Asian market. Created around late 1998 to early 1999 for operators like Globe Telecom in the Philippines and Singtel in Singapore, it was never part of Nokia’s global roadmap and never appeared in eur;opean or American catalogs.

    Internally, the 3810 belongs to the extended NHE-8A platform, a rare fork of the 3110 architecture that Nokia used only for operator-specific customizations. Unlike typical localized firmware builds, this model has a modified PCB layout, different RF filters, region-specific power amplifiers, and firmware adjusted for hot and congested GSM-900 networks in Asia. The firmware also contains unique operator menus, a different startup behavior, and a SIM Toolkit implementation that the original 3110 did not have.

    Visually, the 3810 shares the silhouette of the 3110, but key differences immediately confirm it as its own device. It has a redesigned navigation cluster, different soft keys, a unique lower mask, and a housing made from a thicker, more rubberized plastic type. These material changes were intentional, allowing the phone to survive the high humidity and heat typical of Southeast Asia. The keypad layout is also subtly different, confirming that this is not a housing replacement but a dedicated mold used only for this variant.

    The 3810 was priced below the 5110 and slightly below the original 3110 in the APAC region, typically selling around PHP 7000 to 9000, often bundled with prepaid or SIM activation packages. Because Nokia kept production extremely limited and distributed the model only through operator channels, most units were used heavily and eventually scrapped. Almost none were exported, and very few examples have survived in clean or working condition. Today it stands as one of the rarest late 90s Nokias, more elusive than many prototypes, and almost never seen in Western collections.

    The unit presented here is a remarkable surviving example, displaying Globe firmware on boot and all the unique hardware traits of the genuine 3810 platform. More than just a variant, it represents a hidden branch of Nokia history, a fully official model that Nokia itself barely acknowledged and one that existed only because regional operators demanded a slightly more modern, network-optimized alternative to the aging 3110. Devices like this highlight how complex Nokia’s APAC strategy truly was and why some of the rarest Nokias were never sold outside their home markets.

    📝 Reviews when released: Mobile Review 🔗

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