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Commodore’s flip phone runs Android apps, but it’s the retro looks that’ll convince you to get one

The Callback 8020 wants to be the smarter dumb phone, with modern apps, privacy-first software, and a proper snap-shut design.

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Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware
Commodore

Commodore is bringing back the flip phone for people who want fewer screen traps without giving up every useful app. The Commodore Callback 8020 uses a custom Sailfish OS build and supports many Android apps through Linux, which gives it more range than a typical minimalist handset.

The retro look does a lot of the selling. You get a clamshell body, T9-style texting, a small front status display, dome LED notifications, and color options that echo old Commodore hardware more than modern glass-slab phones.

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Commodore also keeps the everyday tools most people would miss. Its feature list includes messaging, maps, music, rideshare apps, podcasts, QR scanning, calendars, voice notes, and a 48MP Sony rear camera, while social apps, browsers, email, and work chat apps are blocked.

Why does the flip help

The Callback 8020’s whole rhythm starts with the hinge. You open it for a task, use the tool you need, then close it when you’re finished.

That physical break gives the phone a clearer stopping point than a touchscreen slab. T9-style texting slows the usual tap-and-scroll loop, and the outer display can show time, battery, and signal without lighting up the full interface. Dome LEDs handle alerts, so every notification doesn’t have to become another app check.

Which apps do you keep

The phone lands between a stripped-down handset and a conventional smartphone. Commodore says it supports 99% of Android apps in Linux, which should make essentials like messaging, navigation, audio, rideshare, and calendars easier to keep in rotation.

Its privacy angle comes from software built with Jolla around Sailfish OS. Commodore says the phone doesn’t require account sign-in and isn’t designed around selling your data, though app support can vary by service, region, and network. Check your must-have apps before you treat it as your daily phone.

When can you preorder the phone

Pre-orders for the Commodore Callback 8020 are set to open June 30 at 10:00 CEST, with pricing starting at $499 with earphones included. Commodore is also offering a $50 waitlist discount.

The best reason to consider it is fit, not specs. If you want messaging, maps, music, a camera, and fewer feeds in your pocket, the Callback 8020 has a clear lane. Commodore notes that specs and features aren’t final, some images are renders, and compatibility can vary, so verify your essentials before you preorder.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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