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Should flip phones make a comeback? Maybe simpler tech is what society needs

Sometimes the Best way to Move Forward is by Flipping Back

Photo Credit: Stockking

BY AMARI SUKHDEO

Once upon a time, ending a phone call was deeply satisfying. You didn’t tap a screen—you snapped your phone shut with flair, drama, and maybe a little sass. Flip phones were more than gadgets. They were statements.

Now? Our smartphones can do almost everything—except leave us alone. Notifications, endless scrolling, 24/7 access to… everything. We carry the internet in our pockets, and somehow it feels like it’s carrying us.

“In a world obsessed with more screen time, maybe the smartest tech choice is the dumbest one.”

If you’ve ever opened your phone to check the time and somehow ended up deep in a Reddit thread about haunted IKEA stores, you’re not alone. According to research from USC’s Viterbi School of Engineering, over 74% of smartphone users feel addicted to their devices. That’s not just annoying—it’s exhausting. Constant stimulation isn’t just killing our focus, it’s turning us into anxious, attention-fractured zombies.

Why flip phones are making a quiet comeback

There’s something refreshing about a phone that can’t summon Twitter, FaceTime, or 1,200 unread emails. Just call, text, and maybe T9 your way through a grocery list. That’s it. Bliss.

In fact, interest in “dumb phones” is on the rise. Not ironically, but intentionally. People are seeking a detox from the noise, and companies are noticing. Motorola’s Razr 60 Ultra, dropping later this month, brings modern specs to the retro fold—with a 6.96″ AMOLED screen and cameras that can still make you look good in bad lighting. So yes, even your digital minimalist side can have high-res selfies.

 It’s not anti-tech. It’s pro-intention.

Let’s be real: no one’s trying to live completely off the grid, but the flip phone revival is part of a broader trend—digital minimalism. It’s about using tech on your terms instead of being used by it. Some people go all in, switching full-time to a dumb phone. Others use it as a “weekend phone,” turning down the noise when they actually want to live.

Sure, a flip phone can’t replace everything. You’re not going to run your remote job or navigate a road trip with Google Maps on a screen the size of a Tic Tac, but maybe that’s the point. Do we really need to be: reachable, trackable, and scrollable every second?

Maybe flip phones aren’t here to save us. Maybe they’re here to remind us that we don’t always have to be plugged in. That sometimes the smartest tech choice is the one that gives you your time, your presence, and your peace of mind back.

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