After dying a painful death at the hand of the iPhone’s revolutionary capacitive touchscreen, the QWERTY smartphone is rising up from the graveyard this year.

Whether it’s nostalgia for a physical keyboard, frustration at iOS’s ever-worsening software keyboard, or just plain boredom with glass slabs, companies are rebooting QWERTY phones this year for some reason.

At CES 2026:

  • Clicks, the company behind the Clicks keyboard case and the new Power Keyboard, announced plans to sell the Communicator, a “second phone” with a QWERTY keypad
  • Unihertz also teased a new phone with a physical keyboard. The Titan 2 Elite seems to be a less gimmicky version of the Titan 2, which itself was a BlackBerry Passport knockoff but with a bizarre square screen on the backside.

[T]wo QWERTY phone announcements in this still very new year suggest there may be some kind of trend. Maybe after 19 years of the iPhone and touchscreens defining the mobile experience, it’s time to go back to the physical keyboard and its more tactile typing.

  • pat277@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    Last time I checked, none of these have display out, the only thing I kinda need. Sucks to not have it…

  • Furbag@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I miss my Blackberry Pearl…

    I fear that that design of phone layout/UI will never make a comeback.

  • Gleddified@lemmy.ca
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    7 days ago

    The blackberry priv was the perfect phone form factor I just want that but with better hardware inside

  • Cloudstash@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    These small keyboars are very bad and just really horrible when using. At least in my experience.

      • yardratianSoma@lemmy.ca
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        6 days ago

        still far better than touchscreens. I used a blackberry keyone for a while, and it was amazing, until I lost it on a walk in the park years ago.

        • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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          6 days ago

          I do wonder what would be more annoying though: An on-screen keyboard or a weird stubby aspect ratio that doesn’t play nice with all your other apps.

          Especially when you can already get a keyboard case for a regular phone and have the best of both worlds.

    • cecilkorik@lemmy.ca
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      9 days ago

      All this bullshit about phones with folding screens nowadays when what I really want is a phone with a folding mechanical 104-key :P

      • Franconian_Nomad@feddit.org
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        9 days ago

        Would also erase the need for the atrocious spellcheck. Few minutes ago I wanted to write „random“ it got changed to „ransom“ and when I changed it again I wrote “randon“ by accident.

        • yardratianSoma@lemmy.ca
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          6 days ago

          We’ve collectively probably lost years, if not a decade of our human lives just trying to fix autocorrect fuck ups.

  • ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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    8 days ago

    It’s amazing how homogenized phones became: Apple or Google flavoured slabs with a 6" or 6.5" display. That’s starting to change with foldable displays and it looks like 2026 might be a comeback year for hardware keyboards, so I’m optimistic about mobile devices being more than just social media consumption machines.

    Fifteen years ago you could get portrait sliders and landscape sliders and flip phones and BlackBerry style phones and phones that had game controls, and 4" slabs and 6" slabs (called “phablets” back then). There was so much more choice and it was so much more fun. Five years ago you couldn’t even get a modern phone that’s less than 6" so it fits easily in your pocket.

  • Nalivai@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    The Titan 2 Elite seems to be a less gimmicky version of the Titan 2

    They just had to announce it after I ordered the one with all the “bizarre” gimmicks.

  • Iced Raktajino@startrek.websiteOP
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    9 days ago

    I’ve been rocking a Minimal Phone for about 6 or 7 months now, and man am I excited to have options for QWERTY phones again.

    just plain boredom with glass slabs

    This. So much this. They’re all boring, too tall, and too skinny with about as much personality as a used up dryer sheet. It’s like they’re designed solely for scrolling an endless feed of mind-numbing slop. I remember being able to actually do things on my older smartphones (RDP, SSH, editing documents/spreadsheets, etc). You can still do those things now, but you basically have to break out a bluetooth keyboard to do anything more than the most basic things and it feels like trying to look at a panorama through a keyhole.

    • HaraldvonBlauzahn@feddit.org
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      8 days ago

      I’ve been rocking a Minimal Phone for about 6 or 7 months now, and man am I excited to have options for QWERTY phones again.

      It’s like they’re designed solely for scrolling an endless feed of mind-numbing slop.

      It is because they are exactly that.

      There exist palmtops and handheld computers. I have a Gemini PDA running Sailfish OS Linux and it feels very different - like a small, cat-sized laptop. No problem running ssh or vim or ledger on it, or self-written guile apps, or cross-compiled Rust CLI tools. It is a computer, not a consumption device.

  • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    I wrote mobile apps from 2005 to 2019, first on WinCE/Windows Mobile and then iOS. Briefly in 2010 I wrote a TV Guide-type app for Blackberry. Up to that point I had had nothing but contempt for Blackberry but that experience really changed my mind almost instantly. The keyboards on those devices were just so incredibly good, and even though the screens were tiny, the trackball was a fantastic pointing device that allowed pinpoint precision even on that tiny screen (cleaning the trackball was definitely disgusting but you didn’t have to do it all that often). Under the hood those devices were really impressive as well; I don’t think anybody appreciated how much memory they actually had and how fast the processors really were.

    A minor weakness was that RIM chose 16-bit color for the displays early on, which gave a crappy look especially for videos (which were really too tiny to watch anyway). Halving your video RAM requirements maybe made sense in 2000 but it was a terrible decision just 18 months later (according to Moore, anyway). The major weakness, though, was the shitty development environment. The built-in controls provided by the framework were terrible, but the worst part was that any time you attempted to compile your app, each module incorporated into it had to be independently signed by RIM’s servers. On a good day, the signing process would take 10-15 minutes, while on a slow day it would take upwards of an hour or maybe never happen at all. And this was even if you’d made a one-line change to your code.

    RIP RIM, but I’d like to see the keyboards coming back. Also the trackwheels.

  • MrScottyTay@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    People should look into the ikko mind one too. Its shit that they have so much emphasis on their “AI OS” which is just an integrated app (which can be requested to be removed before delivery or removed via adb). But the hardware looks solid.

    Its a square screen phone that you can get a keyboard case for that includes a hifi dac. Its camera is a big sony sensor that can flip over to the front so they didn’t need to split the camera money between two or more sensors.