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Showing 1–12 of 74 results
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Nokia 2626
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: C (Common)
👁 Evaluation in my collection: New – 10/10
⏱ Life timer: 00m | 📦 Boxed: YES – SWAP
📅 Release Year: 2006 | 💰 Release Price: N/A
📊 Units Sold: ~15M
📰 Why this phone matters: Entry Level from Nokia – There are many pluses to this phone. It is about 91gms in weight and has a phonebookwhich can hold 300 entries. It has a four way navigation key which makes the phone easy to use. It also has a FM radio which can be played on speaker while listeningthrough headphones. I really like the voice recording facility as well which can be used on and off calls.📝 Reviews when released: N/A 💔
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Nokia 2650 Gray
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: C (Common)
👁 Evaluation in my collection: Great – 9.5/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Pinoccchio
⏱ Life timer: 15h | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2004 | 💰 Release Price: ~125 $
📊 Units Sold: ~2M
📰 Why this phone matters: The Nokia 2650 was first made public in the second quarter of 2004. The model was one of Nokia’s few clamshell releases at that time, and being an entry-level phone, it became popular largely due to its low price.📝 Reviews when released: Mobile Review 🔗
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Nokia 2650 Quiksilver: Sealed Boost Mobile Brown Edition
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: S (Ultra Rare)
⭐ WOW Factor: Quiksilver Nokia 2650 by Boost Mobile is a co-branded surf lifestyle edition
👁 Evaluation in my collection: Great – 9.5/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Pinoccchio
⏱ Life timer: 15h | 📦 Boxed: YES
📅 Release Year: 2004 | 💰 Release Price: ~125 $
📊 Units Sold: ~50k
📰 Why this phone matters: This unit is a sealed time capsule from the mid 2000s surf and pre paid boom: the Quiksilver Nokia 2650 by Boost Mobile, built on the Brown variant of Nokia’s classic clamshell and wrapped in a massive co branded retail pack. The front of the box is pure surf culture, with bold Quiksilver graphics, a surfer crashing through the waves and a custom Nokia 2650 shown with Quiksilver logos and stripes on the flip. Boost Mobile and yes Optus badges underline that this was the Australian youth offer of its time, complete with a free Boost mini lanyard and 10 dollars of pre paid credit right out of the box.The Quiksilver edition is more than a simple color variant. This bundle includes unique Quiksilver artwork on the phone’s shell, a dedicated Boost Mobile mini lanyard accessory, special surf themed packaging, and prepaid credit built into the offer. The entire package was created as a lifestyle product, tying Nokia’s entry level clamshell design to the surf and skate identity that Boost Mobile used to dominate the prepaid market in Australia. The huge graphic box and branded phone shell make this edition visually stand out far beyond the standard 2650 Brown.
Technically, the phone inside is a standard Nokia 2650: a compact clamshell Series 40 device with a 128×128 color CSTN display, LED alerts for calls and SMS, GPRS data, Java games and BL-4C battery. What makes this sealed Quiksilver edition extraordinary is not a change in hardware, but the way Nokia and Boost wrapped it into a lifestyle bundle. For a collector, this is more than just a phone box; it is a complete, untouched artifact of early 2000s mobile branding, merging Nokia engineering, Quiksilver surf identity and Boost Mobile’s prepaid culture into one rare, perfectly preserved package.
📝 Reviews when released: Mobile Review 🔗
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Nokia 2650 Red
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: C (Common)
👁 Evaluation in my collection: Great – 9.5/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Pinoccchio
⏱ Life timer: 28h | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2004 | 💰 Release Price: ~125 $
📊 Units Sold: ~2M
📰 Why this phone matters: The Nokia 2650 was first made public in the second quarter of 2004. The model was one of Nokia’s few clamshell releases at that time, and being an entry-level phone, it became popular largely due to its low price.📝 Reviews when released: Mobile Review 🔗
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Nokia 2652
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: C (Common)
👁 Evaluation in my collection: Great – 9.5/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Pinoccchio
⏱ Life timer: N/A | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2004 | 💰 Release Price: ~125 $
📊 Units Sold: ~500k
📰 Why this phone matters: The Nokia 2650 was first made public in the second quarter of 2004. The model was one of Nokia’s few clamshell releases at that time, and being an entry-level phone, it became popular largely due to its low price.📝 Reviews when released: Mobile Review 🔗
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Nokia 3100
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: D (Very Common)
👁 Evaluation in my collection: Great – 9.8/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Maxine
⏱ Life timer: 270h | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2003 | 💰 Release Price: 50 $
📊 Units Sold: ~15M
📰 Why this phone matters: The Nokia 3100 is a triband-GSM mobile phone announced on 17 June 2003 as an entry-level phone from Nokia and released in September 2003, designed primarily for the newer generation of marketing audience.
The Nokia 3100 was developed from the Nokia 6100 as a successor to the Nokia 3510. The phone was Nokia’s first in the youth-oriented 3000-series to be equipped with a 128×128 pixel passive colour display (4096 colors/12-bit), and included Java MIDP 1.0, XHTML and WAP browser, GPRS, Pop-Port connectivity and Lithium-ion battery. It is also capable of playing polyphonic MIDI files, which can be used as ringtones.
It is compact in size and lightweight, and also features special lighting effects.📝 Reviews when released: N/A 💔
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Nokia 3100 Orange Gaming
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: B (Uncommon)
👁 Evaluation in my collection: Great – 9.8/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Maxine
⏱ Life timer: 44h | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2003 | 💰 Release Price: 50 $
📊 Units Sold: ~100k
📰 Why this phone matters: The Nokia 3100 is a triband-GSM mobile phone announced on 17 June 2003 as an entry-level phone from Nokia and released in September 2003, designed primarily for the newer generation of marketing audience.
The Nokia 3100 was developed from the Nokia 6100 as a successor to the Nokia 3510. The phone was Nokia’s first in the youth-oriented 3000-series to be equipped with a 128×128 pixel passive colour display (4096 colors/12-bit), and included Java MIDP 1.0, XHTML and WAP browser, GPRS, Pop-Port connectivity and Lithium-ion battery. It is also capable of playing polyphonic MIDI files, which can be used as ringtones.
It is compact in size and lightweight, and also features special lighting effects.📝 Reviews when released: N/A 💔
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Nokia 3100b
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: C (Common)
👁 Evaluation in my collection: Good – 9/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Maxine
⏱ Life timer: 79h | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2003 | 💰 Release Price: 50 $
📊 Units Sold: ~1.5M
📰 Why this phone matters: This version intended to be used in American GSM networks. It works in GSM 850/1800/1900.Differences from the basic 3100:
The Grid (originally the Line), an additional main menu interface in the settings menu
TTY/TTD option in Menu > Settings > Enhancement settings that appears only if the phone has been connected to a headset, TTD, or similar device
Voice recording during an active call, up to 1 minute
World clock that displays the time for various time zones. The Nokia 3100 is a triband-GSM mobile phone announced on 17 June 2003 as an entry-level phone from Nokia and released in September 2003, designed primarily for the newer generation of marketing audience.
The Nokia 3100 was developed from the Nokia 6100 as a successor to the Nokia 3510. The phone was Nokia’s first in the youth-oriented 3000-series to be equipped with a 128×128 pixel passive colour display (4096 colors/12-bit), and included Java MIDP 1.0, XHTML and WAP browser, GPRS, Pop-Port connectivity and Lithium-ion battery. It is also capable of playing polyphonic MIDI files, which can be used as ringtones.
It is compact in size and lightweight, and also features special lighting effects.📝 Reviews when released: N/A 💔
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Nokia 3108 – The Handwriting Pioneer
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: A (Rare)
⭐ WOW Factor: Handwriting Recognition
👁 Evaluation in my collection: New – 10/10
⏱ Life timer: 0 | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2003 | 💰 Release Price: N/A
📊 Units Sold: ~300k
📰 Why this phone matters: The Nokia 3108 is one of Nokia’s most unusual and innovative feature phones, created specifically for the Chinese market and designed around pen-based handwriting recognition. Built on the early Series 40 platform, the 3108 combines a compact candybar form with a flip-down translucent keypad that reveals a dedicated writing pad. Using the included stylus, the phone can recognize both English and Chinese handwriting, offering an input method perfectly adapted to the complexity of Chinese characters.This unit represents one of Nokia’s rare experiments in interface design, developed long before touchscreens became mainstream. The writing pad system uses stroke detection software and a pressure-sensitive surface, making the 3108 function as an early hybrid between classic keypad phones and later touch-driven devices. It also includes MMS, Java support, and a speakerphone, bringing modern features to a form factor centered on pen input.
Because the 3108 was sold only in China and produced for a short period, surviving units are uncommon, and examples in clean condition are even harder to find. As part of Nokia’s limited Pen Input family, the 3108 stands out as a unique collector piece that captures a moment of bold experimentation in Nokia’s history. It remains one of the very few non-touchscreen devices in the world capable of recognizing handwritten text, making it an important and highly distinctive addition to any serious mobile phone collection.
📝 Reviews when released: N/A 💔
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Nokia 3128 Prototype “ID SAMPLE”: BenQ Hybrid | Unreleases Colour Light Blue
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: X (Mystical Prototype)
⭐ WOW Factor: Represents a short-lived moment when BenQ attempted to showcase its ability to deliver a complete UI solution, hoping to convince Nokia that full software outsourcing for low-cost devices was feasible.
The existence of this device is proof of a BenQ-driven initiative, briefly evaluated and ultimately rejected by Nokia.
Only a handful of such BenQ UI?on?Nokia hardware identity samples were ever created, making surviving units exceptionally rare.👁 Evaluation in my collection: New – 10/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Kirin
⏱ Life timer: 0 | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2003 | 💰 Release Price: ~300 $
📊 Units Sold: ~15M (final units)
📰 Why this phone matters: This device is one of the strangest, most intriguing Nokia 3128 variants ever uncovered. Externally it follows the familiar engineering path of the 3128 platform, but once powered on, everything breaks the pattern. There is no Nokia branding in the software, no Nokia splash screen, no Series 40 heritage, instead it boots into a BenQ-style interface, complete with custom icons, Chinese menu structures, and UI elements never found on any released Nokia product.The label inside reads “ID SAMPLE”, marking it as a pre-production identity unit used for internal validation during Nokia’s ODM sourcing phase. These ID Samples were not mass-produced, not distributed to carriers, and not meant to survive outside the labs. The combination of Nokia hardware and a BenQ firmware stack indicates that this device comes from the period when Nokia briefly explored outsourcing complete handset UI development to third-party Asian manufacturers before ultimately abandoning the idea.
The handwriting is a timestamp from the engineering team: “August 16, 2004.”
It marks when this specific prototype was logged, flashed, or validated.The software screens match early prototypes from unreleased BenQ flip designs, particularly those associated with the never-released BenQ A-Series Asian clamshells, hinting that this firmware was being evaluated on Nokia shells for cost and speed benchmarking. The UI animations, iconography, and color palettes align far more with BenQ’s internal 2004-2005 development than with anything Nokia ever shipped.
A detail that further confirms how early this unit is, the SIM card lock mechanism is completely missing, leaving the slot open and unfinished exactly as seen on raw factory evaluation samples. Even more telling, the device reports an IMEI of 0000000, a clear sign of a pre-IMEI-burning engineering stage where the radio stack and identity fields had not yet been finalized.
The mysterious “cmg” sticker seen on the display is consistent with internal testing labels used during configuration management, marking the unit for firmware staging or UI evaluation. These stickers usually identify a branch, a module, or a build handler inside the engineering workflow and marks it as a monitored experimental build – exactly the kind of anomaly this prototype represents.
All the elements together, the missing SIM lock, the IMEI 0000000, the absent Nokia splash, the BenQ interface, the “ID SAMPLE” marking, the prototype hardware architecture, and the inconsistencies between software and chassis, place this device among the rarest 3128 developmental anomalies, far more unusual than standard prototypes or early F-series units. It is a tangible piece of the abandoned Nokia-BenQ convergence experiments, where Nokia evaluated whether foreign UI stacks could run on their hardware to accelerate low-cost market entry.
A true one-off laboratory hybrid, and one of the most unusual pre-production Nokia 3128 derivatives ever documented.
📝 Reviews when released: N/A 💔
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Nokia 3128 Prototype F5.0 : Codename Kirin| Unreleased Colour (Orange)
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: S (Ultra Rare)
⭐ WOW Factor: Represents a short-lived moment when BenQ attempted to showcase its ability to deliver a complete UI solution, hoping to convince Nokia that full software outsourcing for low-cost devices was feasible.
The existence of this device is proof of a BenQ-driven initiative, briefly evaluated and ultimately rejected by Nokia.
Only a handful of such BenQ UI?on?Nokia hardware identity samples were ever created, making surviving units exceptionally rare.👁 Evaluation in my collection: New – 10/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Kirin
⏱ Life timer: 0 | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2003 | 💰 Release Price: ~300 $
📊 Units Sold: ~15M (final units)
📰 Why this phone matters: A remarkably rare piece of Nokia’s China-market CDMA history, the Nokia 3128 (Type RH-72) stands apart from the brand’s mainstream lineup.
Developed during Nokia’s short-lived collaboration with BenQ/Qisda for ODM CDMA devices, the 3128 blends Nokia’s software customisation with a hardware platform originating from BenQ’s Kirin F5.0 design family – a handset architecture that BenQ itself never released commercially.This prototype unit, finished in an unreleased Orange colourway, represents a pre-production stage never intended for the public market. The colour scheme follows BenQ’s design language rather than Nokia’s, making it instantly identifiable among collectors familiar with early-2000s ODM manufacturing. Hardware elements – including the casing geometry, battery interface and Qualcomm-based CDMA internals – further underline its BenQ lineage while still carrying official Nokia branding, labels and firmware.
The device offered compact CDMA 1X connectivity, a lightweight clamshell form factor and the simplified user interface typical of Nokia’s China-exclusive CDMA portfolio of the era.
This example is preserved brand new, never used in the collection – a highly desirable state for a model whose production numbers were already extremely small.
A rare convergence of two major manufacturers’ design philosophies, the Nokia 3128 prototype in Orange stands as one of the most distinctive and least-known ODM Nokia variants ever created.
📝 Reviews when released: N/A 💔
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Nokia 3200
Quick View💎 Rarity Index: C (Common)
👁 Evaluation in my collection: As New – 10/10
🕵 Nokia Codename: Rio
⏱ Life timer: 92h | 📦 Boxed: NO
📅 Release Year: 2003 | 💰 Release Price: ~300 $
📊 Units Sold: ~8M
📰 Why this phone matters: An interesting feature present in this phone is that the face plate system allows users to print out their own cut-out cover designs and use it in the phone. The official special released designs include “Snowboard,” “Street life” and “Urban chic”. It was thus marketed as being “fun and funky” with a unique style📝 Reviews when released: Mobile Review 🔗
















