Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

BlackBerry and Porsche Design are back with the $2350 P’9983 smartphone

Add as a preferred source on Google

BlackBerry may be struggling to convince us to buy its sensibly priced phones, but that hasn’t stopped it launching another expensive collaboration with Porsche Design. It’s the P’9983, and it follows last year’s P’9982, which was a variation on the Z10 touchscreen phone. This time, the pair have made a return to the QWERTY keyboard, modeling the P’9983 on the BlackBerry Q10.

Porsche Design smartphones are all about style. The body is made from forged stainless steel, and the rear panel is apparently made out of a special glass-weave material. All this may sound flash, but stainless steel and the glass-weave material are also used on the standard Q10, and not unique to the P’9983. Finally, BlackBerry trumpets the use of sapphire glass to keep the camera lens safe from harm.

Recommended Videos

The P’9983 is considerably more attractive than the basic Q10, and while the chiseled good looks will certainly make it stand out, it isn’t all that different to the old P’9981. Things aren’t so cutting edge when you look closely at the specs either. The touchscreen measures 3.1-inches and has a 720 x 720 pixel resolution, there’s an 8-megapixel camera on the back, a 2-megapixel front cam, and a dual-core 1.5GHz processor inside.

If you’re looking for the technical differences between the P’9983 and the Q10, then it’s all about internal storage space. The Porsche Design phone has 64GB of space, plus a MicroSD card slot to add up to another 128GB, while the Q10 has 16GB, and its MicroSD card slot only supports up to 32GB extra. Both phones have 2GB of RAM, support 4G LTE, and run BlackBerry 10, although the Porsche phone will ship with 10.3 installed.

The exclusive nature of the phone does mean it comes in a pretty box, accompanied by an international charging kit, a stereo headset, and (careful, now) a polishing cloth. Porsche Design will also sell a range of accessories, including Italian leather rear covers. The P’9983 will go on sale in October, and although BlackBerry hasn’t stated the price, according to the Porsche Design website, it’ll be 1,650 euros, or about $2350.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
Topics
iPhone 18 Pro leak predicts an eye-candy cool color option that you can already find on the Kindle
Apple’s new Dark Cherry shade is all about subtle luxury.
White iPhone Pro Max camera.

Apple leaks are usually about cameras or performance, but this time, it’s the color that’s stealing the spotlight. And honestly, it’s giving… Kindle energy? Because if the latest reports are accurate, the iPhone 18 Pro might finally ditch flashy tones for something a lot more classy and familiar.

iPhone 18 Pro’s new “Dark Cherry” color is the main attraction

Read more
New Gigs app uses AI to organise your live music memories
You can now organise all your concert memories in one place
Gigs app

A new iPhone app called Gigs is aiming to change how music fans remember live events by turning scattered concert memories into a structured, searchable archive. Developed by indie creator Hidde van der Ploeg, the app uses artificial intelligence to organise past concert experiences into a personalised digital timeline.

The idea is simple: instead of letting ticket stubs, screenshots, and photos sit forgotten across devices, Gigs brings them together into one place - complete with details, stats, and memories tied to each event.

Read more
Samsung is already rethinking the TriFold, and this time, it’s starting with the hinge
The TriFold may have had a short shelf life, but its successor is already being engineered to last and to fold flatter.
Samsung Galaxy TriFold folding, TriFold Phone

The original Galaxy Z TriFold barely spent enough time in the market to warm pockets before Samsung pulled the plug on it. The company launched the phone on January 30, 2026, as the world’s first mass-market triple-fold smartphone sold in the United States, but it was discontinued just three months later. 

However, Samsung hasn’t given up on the concept yet, as it's already engineering a sequel and starting from the hinge. 

Read more