
Nothing just pulled the curtain back on the Phone 3a Community Edition, a limited 1,000-unit drop built around a vibrant teal design inspired by late-90s gaming hardware. This special release is the result of a nine-month collaboration between Nothing’s internal teams and four winners from its community design project. The phone itself is a visual statement, swapping the brand’s typical monochrome palette for a look that feels more playful and expressive. It’s a collector’s piece for those who appreciate when a company lets its community take the wheel, resulting in a product that feels both nostalgic and distinctly modern.
Underneath the colorful new shell, the device carries internals identical to the standard Phone 3a. It is powered by a Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chipset and features a 6.77-inch 120Hz AMOLED display with 2,160Hz PWM dimming for smooth visuals. The camera system includes a 50MP main sensor with OIS, a 50MP 2x telephoto lens, and an 8MP ultrawide. A 5,000mAh battery with 50W wired charging handles power. The single 12GB/256GB configuration is priced at £379, matching the top-tier regular model and reinforcing that this is a design-focused release, not a spec upgrade.
Designer: Emre Kayganacl

The aesthetic is where the Community Edition truly sets itself apart. The translucent teal back, designed by winner Emre Kayganacl, reveals internal components arranged as clean geometric layers. This gives the rear a deliberate, compositional quality rather than a raw, tech-exposed look. The horizontal camera module sits perfectly centered, with Nothing’s signature glyph light arcs wrapping around it to signal notifications. Small, scattered circles of yellow and magenta add playful contrast, giving the phone a character reminiscent of a limited-edition handheld console without feeling like a simple throwback.

This cohesive design language extends to the front of the phone. The software experience includes an exclusive teal-gradient wallpaper and a custom lock-screen clock designed by community winner Jad Zock. The rounded, monochrome icons of Nothing OS float above the colorful background, tying the user interface directly to the physical hardware. This thoughtful integration ensures the device feels like a single, unified object. It’s a complete visual package that considers how the phone looks both when the screen is on and off, creating a more holistic product experience.

The project began with over 700 submissions from Nothing’s community, with winners selected for hardware design, accessories, software visuals, and marketing. This co-creation process is central to the phone’s story, representing a deeper collaboration than the company’s first community project. For those hoping to get one, registration is open until December 11, with a limited sales window opening on December 12 through Nothing’s website. It’s a rare opportunity to own a device that is as much a design experiment as it is a daily driver.
