I like my phone very much. Friends, no … I like my phone very much. I hate that I love my phone, but I still love it. I love my phone so much that I type stupid small words in my stupid small screen throughout the day and wait for small reactions of stupidity. I love my phone, but it does not love me, especially when it comes to typing. I am very bad in typing. If the highest amount of efforts were a competition to try to type at least the words and fail, then I will win the triple crown platinum all-time Iron Chef Trophy (closed with my eyes on one leg). This is a problem to ensure, but if you are old enough to remember a time before social media, it can also be a problem.
Don’t worry, however; There is a solution of your God-terrible typing, and it has long been under your nose, technically. Solution: this Blattent Blackberry Ripoff With a physical keyboard, Android 15And 5g connectivity,
Introduction to Titan 2 – the phone that can move forward and see back!
The latest 𝐐𝐖𝐄𝐑𝐓𝐘 𝐐𝐖𝐄𝐑𝐓𝐘 𝐐𝐖𝐄𝐑𝐓𝐘 𝐐𝐖𝐄𝐑𝐓𝐘 𝐐𝐖𝐄𝐑𝐓𝐘 𝗔𝗻𝗱𝗿𝗼𝗶𝗱 𝟭𝟱 𝟭𝟱 𝟭𝟱 𝟭𝟱 𝟭𝟱 𝟭𝟱, Titan 2 mixes classic design with modern performance. 🚀 Its re -designed physical keyboard brings back the real touch satisfaction … pic.twitter.com/9h11wkmmuk
– Unihertz (@unihertz) 26 June, 2025
Introduction to Titan 2, a new crowdeded phone from Unihertz which (its preceding, Titan 1) clearly takes its signal from Blackberry. Most importantly, there is a full qwerty keyboard with the actual button that you can press to produce words with your tired ass thumb that hopes that they build the whole sentences. This is the old story as time, but in the never-ending sea of touchscreen, somehow a breath of fresh air-or minimal recycling, non-tachscreen air. If you are wondering how you scroll on something like this, then I am also excited to relay that there is a scroll sensor made in the fricking keyboard. This means that you can only swipe brain-roting tickes on keys to swallow your internet-aid brain desires. I doubt how well this facility works, but still it thrives a good. Also, don’t worry, you can still use as a standard touchscreen if you choose.
Above all that, there is also a screen behind this thing, which is boners. Unihertz, on its kickstarter page, the description of this feature is as follows: “Titan 2 has a 4.5-inch square primary display with a resolution of 1,440 × 1,440 pixels, as well as a even more imaginative double screen experience with a secondary rear display. Its flat-ease design is a modern, a modern, a modern, a modern, a modern, sparrow. Originally, it seems that you can see timer and notifications on the second, small screen, which is good if you want to flip your phone upside down and give some rest to your equally tired eyes, but still keep a small, tired eye on the influx of slack messages that you want to ignore. Camera-wise, there is nothing to write about the house really-a 50-megapixel front-facing sensor and a 32-megapixel selfie camera-but it is probably not that you will not be interested in such a phone anyway.
It is really something interesting about the fact that a phone like Titan 2 or Titan 1 can be present in this world where everything is a glass slab, and as a screen-aid millennium, I think I think I understand the appeal. Techniques like touchscreen and autocorite have become lynchpins and launchpads for our smartphone experience, I think there is still some strangely unexpected typing about typing on the surface of a flat glass. My thumbs, no matter what I try to train them, simply never want to cooperate, and the autocorite feels equally unruly. There is a simplicity and tact that I crave, and clearly do others. As a writing, Titan 2 already has $ 1,005,074 from the backers, and the fact that Unihertz was able to create the sequel to its 2019 Titan in the first place, says a lot. It is going for approximately $ 271 and the approximate delivery is currently October. Let’s just be honest: I might never feel young again, but salute Unihertz because a physical keyboard can make me feel less older.