Despite the twilight of BlackBerry’s heyday, there remains a dedicated cohort of smartphone users who swear by physical keyboards—an appetite underscored by the success of add-on keyboard cases and niche devices carving out small but loyal followings. Unihertz, a Chinese company that has made its name with unusually shaped or compact Android devices, is banking on this nostalgia-driven demand. Its upcoming Titan 2, inspired by the BlackBerry Passport’s distinctive square-display-plus-keyboard form factor, aims to meld that tactile typing experience with modern flagship-adjacent specs like 5G connectivity and Android 15.
Unihertz has turned to Kickstarter once again to validate demand and secure pre-orders before mass production. The Titan 2 campaign swiftly eclipsed its $100,000 goal, signaling that there’s more than just niche curiosity at play. While full retail pricing is pegged at approximately $399, early backers can secure a unit for around $269, with shipping slated to commence in October 2025. This model follows Unihertz’s pattern of crowdfunding-driven launches that both gauge market interest and help manage inventory risk, though backers should remain mindful that Kickstarter pledges carry inherent uncertainties around delivery timelines and final specifications.
The Titan 2 consciously channels the BlackBerry Passport’s boxy aesthetic, swapping curves for sharper edges and a flatter profile. Measuring 137.8 x 88.7 x 10.85 mm and weighing in at roughly 235 grams, it’s both slimmer and lighter than Unihertz’s original Titan but still appreciably heftier than most mainstream phones. The weight, while noticeable, contributes to a sense of durability—reinforced by its ruggedized reputation and Unihertz’s track record with tougher devices. The flat-edged shoulders and squared-off corners reinforce that industrial vibe; this is not a phone that aims for pocket invisibility but rather one that wants to stand out, feel substantial in hand, and project reliability.
At the front, a 4.5-inch square LCD (1,440 x 1,440 pixels) greets users with a 1:1 aspect ratio—a callback to productivity-focused design rather than media-consumption priorities. Though the resolution might seem modest compared to flagship OLED panels, the square canvas excels at displaying full-width emails, documents, spreadsheets, or chat threads without awkward scrolling or letterboxing. A 120Hz refresh rate adds a dash of modern smoothness to navigation and scrolling, even if HDR content and deep blacks aren’t its chief selling points. On the back, a 2-inch secondary “SubScreen” (410 x 502 pixels) sits embedded in the camera bump, enabling glanceable notifications, simple widgets, or previewing selfies when using the rear cameras. This extra display conjures echoes of flip-phone outer screens or modular accessory concepts, serving both practicality and gadget-geek appeal.
Central to the Titan 2’s identity is its QWERTY keyboard, redesigned compared to Unihertz’s earlier Titan model to deliver a “more comfortable, reliable, and versatile tactile typing experience.” Keycaps are sculpted for thumb typing, and the keyboard integrates touch-sensitive surfaces: sliding across keys can scroll through pages or move the cursor, reminiscent of BlackBerry’s trackpad innovations. Each letter key supports custom short-press and long-press shortcuts, letting users launch apps, insert snippets, or trigger actions directly from the hardware. Programmable side buttons and a fingerprint sensor carried over from the original Titan augment quick-access workflows. For heavy typists—journalists, coders on the go, or long-form texters—this could be more than a gimmick: it can translate to tangible gains in speed and comfort.
Under the hood, the Titan 2 sports a MediaTek Dimensity 7300 chipset—an octa-core solution clocked between 2.0 and 2.6 GHz—paired with 12GB of LPDDR5 RAM and 512GB of UFS 3.1 storage. These mid-range-but-capable specs outpace the original Titan (with its Helio P60 and 6GB RAM) and align with many current-day mid-tier phones, offering snappy multitasking, smooth UI navigation, and adequate headroom for productivity apps or moderate gaming. The 5,050mAh battery supports 33W fast charging, promising a day’s worth of use even under heavier keyboard-tapping workloads, though there’s no wireless charging—a compromise perhaps made for simplicity and battery capacity within the slimmer chassis.
Photography on a device like the Titan 2 is unlikely its core raison d’être, but Unihertz still equips it with competent hardware: a 50 MP main rear sensor for general shots, an 8MP telephoto offering roughly 3.4x optical reach, and a 32MP front-facing camera for selfies. The camera bump houses the secondary screen, enabling users to frame selfies via the rear cameras for higher-quality self-portraits. While it may not rival flagship shooters in low-light or computational photography finesse, this setup should handle everyday snaps and video calls adequately. Users prioritizing photography might look elsewhere, but for productivity-focused users, the Titan 2’s imaging specs are a reasonable compromise.
Running Android 15 out of the box, the Titan 2 benefits from up-to-date security patches (depending on Unihertz’s update cadence) and modern Android features like improved privacy controls, multitasking enhancements, and compatibility with a broad range of apps. The physical keyboard’s deep integration—custom shortcuts, swipe-to-scroll gestures—relies on software support and thoughtful UX design. Unihertz’s UI tweaks must balance keyboard-driven interactions with touch gestures; early impressions suggest that the company has iterated on its previous Titan models to refine this integration. However, prospective buyers should watch community feedback on update reliability and software polish as the Kickstarter campaign progresses.
Modern connectivity is well covered: 5G cellular support (dual-SIM variants available), Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, NFC for mobile payments, infrared port for remote control functions, dual-band GPS for navigation, and even an FM radio. A fingerprint sensor on the side ensures quick unlocking, while two extra programmable buttons on the chassis let users trigger flashlight, voice assistants, or app shortcuts with a tap. While niche, these features underscore Unihertz’s aim to pack a lot into a nonstandard form factor, meeting expectations that a productivity-centric gadget should be versatile in real-world scenarios.
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