Bigme Finally Made an E Ink Phone Without the Usual Trade-Off

E Ink phones have built a devoted following among people who’ve grown tired of the toll a conventional smartphone screen takes on their eyes. The technology’s reflective nature means less eye strain over long sessions, better outdoor readability, and dramatically lower battery drain. The problem has always been what happens when you need your phone for something that an E Ink display simply can’t handle well.

Watching a video, navigating an unfamiliar city, or glancing at a notification with any urgency are all tasks that remind E Ink phone owners of what they gave up. The Bigme HiBreak Dual 2 takes a different approach to this trade-off by not asking you to make it at all. It carries both a 6.13-inch color E Ink display and a 5-inch LCD in the same device.

Designer: Bigme

The E Ink side refreshes at up to 80 frames per second, considerably faster than earlier E Ink phones, and addresses the ghosting and sluggishness that made scrolling a timeline or navigating menus feel like wading through mud. The display supports both color and black-and-white content, and stays readable under direct sunlight without the glare that makes most LCD and OLED screens unusable outdoors.

The 5-inch LCD handles the tasks that E Ink screens aren’t built for. A video call, a color-accurate map, a quick stream of something while you’re waiting; these situations don’t work well on E Ink, and the Dual 2 doesn’t pretend otherwise. Flip the phone, and the LCD takes over without sacrificing the primary display that makes reading and messaging so much easier on the eyes.

What makes the Dual 2 a real step forward from its predecessor is the size of that LCD. The original HiBreak Dual had a token sub-screen, small enough to overlook and hard to take seriously as a second display. At 5 inches, the Dual 2’s LCD is actually large enough to be useful, bringing both displays into rough parity rather than a clear main-and-minor arrangement.

The stylus support adds another layer that typical smartphones don’t offer. A dedicated note-taking app with pressure sensitivity and variable pen thickness lets you annotate directly on the E Ink screen with familiar paper-like resistance. For anyone who prefers handwritten notes over typed ones, or who marks up documents throughout the day, this combination of a large E Ink screen and stylus input is the entire value.

The hardware isn’t a compromise, either. A MediaTek Dimensity 8300 processor, 12GB of RAM, 256GB of storage, a 50MP rear camera, and Android 16 with Google Play already installed make it a fully capable phone rather than a reading device that also makes calls. Dual 5G SIM support and NFC round out a spec sheet that doesn’t ask the buyer to excuse anything on the technical side.

The Bigme HiBreak Dual 2 has a super early bird pricing starting at $574 for the black-and-white E Ink configuration and around $699 for the color version. That’s the going rate for a phone that takes eye comfort seriously enough to build an entirely separate display around it, and supplies enough everyday capability alongside to not feel like a specialist tool with a serious drawback.