Having just sold my Nothing Phone (3) and being left with the (2a) Plus as my only Nothing/CMF phone in stock, I realised that it could be a relevant place to stop and look back, especially as I never did formally review the latter. The August 2024 released (2a) Plus was the update to the March 2024 (2a) and brought a few upgrades. Commentators at the time questioned why it was done, just six months later, but for those seeking a slightly faster chipset, slightly faster-charging battery and slightly better Selfie camera, it met the needs - though I'm not sure about the others who'd recently shelled out on the (2a)!
So, back to the outgoing (3) which had the newly-worked Glyph Matrix in a small circle and a wildly opinion-dividing unique look/design on the back. It's also bigger, with more squared-off corners and, for me, doesn't sit in the hand anywhere near as comfortably as the (2a) Plus here. They also took away the Glyph Lighting array on the back, which I'll come to, which I do think was a mistake - they could have had both.
The truth is that after tinkering with the (3)'s Matrix and seeing what it could do with the Toys made available at launch and later developed by them and users in Nothing's Playground, I didn't use it hardly at all. Because I felt I should, I'd have the clock showing on it all the time - then tried to force myself to remember to lay it face-down so I could see/make use of it - thus, of course, rendering the (actually pretty good) Always on Display a little redundant! You've got to tip your hat to Nothing for continuing to develop design ideas and trying to make something interesting and different, but it all feels, well, a bit like toys in a playground! Which is OK for those who want to play and enjoy their play.
Glyph Lighting on the (2a) Plus is simpler than Glyph Matrix by design. It flashes/pulses lights which are formed as one straight and two curved LEDs. They are only in white and in the phone's Settings can be assigned to different Notifications, camera-fill, Timers and even to pulse to music playing on the phone (with the 26 available zones inside the 3). The last of which is the one that I used the most! No interaction needed, just pulses (very brightly, if you want) whenever you start to play music/video from any app installed. Now that is my idea of fun!
The other thing that was introduced to device since the (2a) Plus was the Essential Space and Essential Key. That link takes you to my blog post summarising what that's about, so click through as I won't repeat it all here. Bottom line though is that it's far too 'locked-in' to Nothing/one's phone to be of much use when other, similar, generic tools, can be sync'd out and shared wherever you like. They are working on this and trying to push the boundaries, but even the voice recording transcription gives a limited number of monthly items before you have to wait for a refresh-date. Good idea, but just needs expanding/improving. And when it does, it's likely to cost users. Nothing is free these days (or isn't)! Frankly, I prefer using Nothing phones that simply, like this (2a) Plus, don't have all this! The software and hardware button, getting in the way for, in reality, little or no benefit!
The Always on Display is the same as other Nothing/CMF phones, very good, not quite Moto Razr/Neo/Signature good, but pretty bright and certainly with more options to tinker with what's shown as it echoes what's on the Lockscreen Settings. I always have mine set to have the day/date at the top, then a BIG digital clock under that, followed by two blocks - left one giving me weather information and the right-side, the day/date (again - yeah, don't ask)! I think it's because the date 'number' is bigger than the one at the top. Anyway, users can put what they like in these boxes, even make more boxes if they like by removing the 'clock' bit. Underneath that there's a row of icons depicting Notifications that have arrived and down at the bottom, the battery percentage. It's nice. If I'm being picky, I'd like it a bit brighter, but it's better than most.
There does seem to be one issue related to the Always on Display in that with a couple of simple, clear TPU cases I have tried to use with it, the phone often turns it off. Apparently this is a known issue and is to do with the proximity sensor at the top of the screen. However, when I have fallen foul of this I sometimes get a graphic pop up pointing to the left side of the screen where the volume buttons are as the point of the problem. So I remain foxed on this one (and am currently testing the phone with no case on at all)! Update I did thoroughly clean the top of the screen, right across and it does seem to have fixed it. There's also a setting in Gestures to toggle off "Mistouch prevention" designed to prevent screen touches when the phone is in a pocket. So anyway, YMMV on this one!
This phone is the grey one but it can also be snagged in black. I quite like the grey as it shows off more boldly the design that Nothing have etched into the back under the plastic. No, it's not simply a window to see what's inside, but many could be forgiven for thinking so! Even so, it has an industrial, techy, geeky, nerd vibe to it which I quite like! Various screws and metal panels, mostly for decoration/design, the highlight being those Glyph Lights either side of the camera island. The two camera lenses are side-by-side and kind of look like eyes, which some will find fun, others maybe spooky! It's plastic all round and the colour round the edge matches the grey or black.
It feels robust with the solid plastic and even though it only has an IP5/4 rating, one gets the impression that it would survive the elements pretty well, if not perhaps a swimming trip to the beach! On the front there's Gorilla Glass 5, so maybe for some a screen protector would be wise. Actually, thinking back, I think that there was one fitted out of the box when originally supplied. Ripped off by me, no doubt! The phone is 161.7mm tall, 76.3mm wide and 8.5mm fat, weighs in at 190g.
On the left, yes - on the left, we have the volume buttons, about 60% of the way up - which feels about right. I do think that this is the right place for the volume buttons rather than on the right, for this right-handed person! So on the right, there's just the power button (and no Essential Key)! The buttons are also colour-matched and do feel like they might be made of metal - not sure - but certainly very little 'play' and no sign of flimsiness. On the bottom, one of the pair of speakers, USB-C port, SIM Card Tray and microphone - and another up-top.
The 6.7", 1080p, 20:9 AMOLED screen is flat with really not much bezel around it. It can refresh at up to 120Hz, has 2,160Hz PWM Dimming for reducing eyestrain/headaches from flickering, returns 395ppi and can peak out at 1,300 nits of brightness in auto. You can manually switch between always 60Hz, 120Hz or let the system 'Dynamic' work it out for itself based on what you're up to. Up at the top there's a centralised Selfie camera circle, sitting just below the front-firing second speaking pairing up duties in the usual way as an earpiece for phone use. The screen is plenty bright for me, certainly seems colourful enough (though there an no options to tweak this in Settings) and nicely sharp for most uses/people for sure. No complaints.
The speakers produce a perfectly good and loud sound between them. They are more loud than qualitative, not much bass particularly, but with Wavelet in the mix you certainly can retain most of the volume and polish the sound up a bit to make it richer. Audiophiles won't be satisfied but the other 98% will be impressed, overall. Switch over to Bluetooth (v5.3) and as usual these days, even the smarter audiophile won't really be able to complain. Much. Sound from phones over the last few years has just got better generally - there's very few duff ones out there, certainly from the mid-tier and up.
The phone arrived in 2024 on Android 14. It's currently on Android 16 with the promise of Android 17 at some point. That will be it then, but Nothing are quite good at rolling out updates promptly and they will also ensure Google's Security Patches until August 2028, four years on. They work with Google's changes quite well, unlike some, when new releases roll out whilst retaining their own NothingOS 4.0 over the top (up here from v3). Somehow they blend it quite well though, a bit like Motorola. For example, with Android 16 came a lot of those M3E touches like the double-bouncing notification dismissals and Extra Dark Mode. Some of the changes had actually been rolled out by Nothing and Google seem to have adopted them for core Android, such as the way in which Quick Settings can be resized. NothingOS 4.1 is out there with their new 4-series hardware, so no doubt that will be along shortly here too, apparently expected next month.
Under the bonnet, we have the MediaTek Dimensity 7350 Pro (4nm) pushing things along. This is one of the upgrades and I really can't remember how much more useful this is over the (2a) which has been a long, long time gone. But it feels like it's fast enough to me around the UI and executing more demanding processor tasks. Copying lots of data, updating Play Store, and, though I'm no gamer, I do run a few games when testing phones - usually peaking out with Asphalt the car-racing game - it deals with this admirably with no jerks, overheating or buffers. This one's got 256GB storage and 12GB RAM, though there is an 8GB RAM version too. Again, no complaints - multitasking and jumping back to still-open apps is fluid and no problem at all. Copying over data with the USB-C 2.0 port works just fine and as expected - faster would be better but few people are likely to rely on this these days, I contend.
In terms of connectivity, all seems to work well enough as we'd expect these days. Tested on 2 WiFi networks without issue, good and fast speeds, data and voice with 5G seems to work well, no doubt depending on your location and whether you decide to switch down to 4G. I did this too and it was fine. VoIP, WiFi Calling works as it should too and there's space on the SIM Card Tray for two nanoSIM Cards (though no eSIM support here if that's important to some). GPS locks on and seems to track nicely when I've tested it with various apps, NFC too with other equipment (and in Tesco - I'd forgotten that my banking apps and cards were still registered on this phone)! For Security and biometrics, the optical fingerprint scanner, in my test, works absolutely fine whenever I can get to it before the equally efficient face unlock kicks in!
The battery is a 5,000mAh unit (not Si-C) and it charges, as I said, now at 50W with the right charger/cable instead of the 45W of the (2a). It's charging up from flat in about an hour and halfway in just over half an hour. Perfectly good enough I think, however I miss my (inefficient, overnight) wireless charging! And the performance is impressive enough too, especially if you don't use the AoD when it does take a bit of a hit. But even so, with phone in and out of pockets (so it goes off), general use by Joe Public, it's going to last well into Day 2 I reckon.
While the triple 50MP camera island looks like a pair of eyes staring back at you, the tech behind them is all about consistency. Having 50MP sensors across the board - Main, Ultrawide and Selfie - means you don’t get a terrible drop in quality when switching modes, which is common with many mid-range phones. The Main sensor uses OIS to keep shots steady, making it decently reliable for everyday photos and 4K video. The Ultrawide has a 114° field of view for landscape shots or fitting the whole group (or room) into a frame without having to back up into a wall.
Because the Selfie is also a high-res 50MP sensor (upgraded from the original 2a’s 32MP), it supports 4K recording at 30fps. The best part though is the software - Nothing’s TrueLens Engine does the work, using AI to balance shadows and highlights, so you can mostly just point, shoot and let the 150 million combined pixels do the work! The camera app is very Apple-like with that familiar side-scrolling menu 25% of the way up with shutter button below. Plenty of options too in Settings with Grid overlays, Motion Photo, Filters, Watermarks, level indicators and so on - the usual stuff, but a nice enough experience.
Tech-spec is 50MP f/1.9, OIS, 50MP f/2.2, wide-angle, 4K@30fps and 50MP f/2.2 Selfie and as usual I'll send you to GSMArena for a deeper dive. Do support them as their data and reviews over the years has been, and is, invaluable - a constant source of information for every reviewer out there! Their bottom line is that the cameras provide a solid performance with good video stabilisation and dedicated Night Modes. But do check out the rest, samples and analysis.
Looking back in 2026, the Nothing Phone (2a) Plus feels like a point in time where the mid-device got it right. While the newer Phone (3) chased the ambitious Glyph Matrix and a design that felt a bit too experimental for daily comfort, the (2a) Plus stuck to a shape and a feature set that actually fits the human hand and the average user’s life. It is a nicely balanced device. You get a consistent, high-res camera experience that switches lenses well, a Glyph Lighting system that is genuinely fun (especially when pulsing to music) and a battery that refuses to quit! By avoiding the locked-in feel of the newer Essential Space tools and sticking to the clean, industrial look/feel, this phone remains a solid recommendation even two years on.
If you want a device that looks like a piece of tech-art but behaves like a reliable, no-nonsense tool - and you don't mind missing out on wireless charging - the (2a) Plus is a reminder that the best upgrades aren't always the flashiest ones. With security patches guaranteed until August 2028, it’s not just a stop-gap - it’s a keeper! Surprisingly it's still available for sale, even on Nothing's own website, now reduced from £399 to £299. Great value!















