Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Features

A Barbie phone really is coming this summer, but it’s not what you expect

Add as a preferred source on Google
A promotional image for the Barbie x HMD Global phone.
Mattel and HMD Global
MWC 2026
Read our complete coverage of Mobile World Congress

A most unexpected brand partnership has given us a surprising phone to get excited about at Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2024. HMD Global, the company that makes phones under the Nokia name, has partnered with toymaker Mattel on the Barbie Flip Phone. Yes, that Barbie. But don’t worry that this is going to be little more than a pink version of an old Nokia phone.

“Let me put it like this,” Adam Ferguson, HMD Global’s head of product marketing, said with a smile as I chatted to him over Zoom during the show. “Mattel, and Barbie in particular, is not the kind of brand you offer something off the shelf to.”

Recommended Videos

Excitingly, the two companies have far higher ambitions than releasing just another product tie-in to forget.

Isn’t it a bit late?

A promotional image for HMD Global and Mattel's brand partnership.
HMD Global

The Barbie Flip Phone has been announced at MWC 2024, but the enormously popular, Oscar-nominated Barbie movie came out in mid-2023, so hasn’t the company missed out on all the Barbie fever and Barbenheimer chaos that seemed like the perfect opportunity to launch such a device? While that’s a fair point, Barbie is not just the movie; — far from it. In a recent interview with The Drum, Mattel’s president and CEO Richard Dickson said, “Barbie manifests itself through product interpretations, but the idea is bigger than any one product.”

Ferguson agreed, and said that thinking the phone was ‘late’ “missed the point of what the Barbie brand is about, the trajectory it’s on, and what it means.”

What will the phone be about, if it’s going to be more than just another collaboration? Ferguson continued: “It has been an absolute joy and pleasure working with the team at Mattel, and seeing the journey that Barbie’s gone on over the last years, and we have been able to talk about things like digital detox and girls in tech.”

A promotional image for HMD Global's 2024 branding.
HMD Global

The Barbie Flip Phone won’t be a full smartphone, but a feature phone, which plays to HMD Global’s strengths as a manufacturer and is where the digital detox link comes in. According to research quoted by the company, it’s a concern among many 16 to 24 year-olds, with many of them making efforts to limit time on social media.

“This particular device will have that classic form factor to it, and that’s part of the draw for this particular audience,” Ferguson said. “They are extraordinarily digitally savvy and live their lives online, but they are also extraordinarily anxious about spending too much time on social media and on their phones. They acknowledge this. We’re trying to help with with the real-world challenges and issues that people face.”

What will make the phone special?

A promotional image for HMD Global and Mattel's brand partnership.
HMD Global

If the Barbie Flip Phone is being made to promote things like digital detox, what’s it going to be like? Ferguson wasn’t about to spoil the surprise entirely, but said:

“There’s going to be new things in the software, and a lovely new look and feel. There’s going to be new stuff in the box and the packaging. We are doing everything bespoke with Mattel in this partnership. Obviously, there are certain elements of historical devices, as there’s a reason they want to work with us. They want to draw on the amazing heritage we’ve got being the the sole makers of Nokia devices.”

The journey to the Barbie Flip Phone has been a highly collaborative affair, as Ferguson explained:

“One of the great things about the partnership is that it has a huge two-way dialogue. We have been through dozens of iterations of the design, because Barbie is more than just the color palette, and the overall brand stands for a lot more than that. As for what is the final version, we aren’t revealing the final design yet, but there has been a huge back-and-forth, and it has been a really collaborative design process.”

Pixelated final design?

A promotional image for HMD Global and Mattel's brand partnership.
HMD Global

But don’t expect too much departure from what Barbie is known for in the phone’s design, as HMD Global states the phone will, “embody the vintage chic of the original girl empowerment brand with a dash of pink and sparkle.”

To build our anticipation for the Barbie Flip Phone, HMD Global released the unusual pixelated teaser image seen above at MWC 2024, and it doesn’t give anything away apart from the expected color of the phone. There’s a reason for such a tease though, as Ferguson explained:

“We could have shown what the phone looked like, and we could have shown the features and the specs. But if you do that, a lot of the focus goes on the phone itself and the insides of the device. But there’s a story to be told here, and we will do that closer to launch.”

The Barbie Flip Phone will be released during the summer, and just in case you weren’t sure how much effort the two brands were putting into making this phone a movie-sized success, Ferguson closed our conversation about the device with these words: “This is is something we are pulling out all the stops for.”

Now, we just need the announcement of an Oppenheimer Flip Phone (presumably with a single, big, red button on it) to set us up for an unlikely, mobile-focused repeat of 2023.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
The AI phone era is coming, and the weird brands may not survive it
The market once had room for strange, scrappy, genuinely good phones. AI could turn that room into another luxury suite.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

I have a soft spot for phone brands that made Android feel less inevitable. Meizu is one example, but there were plenty of smaller names with their own strange little gravity, from Fairphone’s repair-first stubbornness to Unihertz’s tiny oddballs, Shiftphone’s modular ideals, Murena’s de-Googled pitch, and Teracube’s attempt to make phone ownership feel less disposable. They weren’t always perfect, and some were never built to go mainstream, but they made smartphones feel alive around the edges.

Now the AI phone push is arriving, and it already looks less like a creative explosion than a cover charge. Meizu said in 2024 that it would end new traditional smartphone projects and focus on AI-enabled devices, which sounds futuristic until it starts feeling like a warning label.

Read more
I was in love with my iPhone Air, until summer arrived
Turns out slim phones and scorching summers don't mix well.
iPhone Air in hand

When Apple unveiled the iPhone Air, I knew immediately it would be my next phone. I have always loved small phones, and I stretched my iPhone 13 mini for as long as possible. But it struggled to keep up with my usage, so I had to upgrade. 

Since Apple no longer makes a small iPhone, the slim iPhone seemed like the right choice at the time. And honestly, it worked out well. While the iPhone Air is not as easy to handle as an iPhone mini, it is one-handable thanks to its slim profile and lower weight. 

Read more
The regular iPhone 18 may miss out on two major Siri AI features
Standard iPhone 18 might not have enough RAM to run some AI features locally
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Apple is expected to debut the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max this fall, possibly alongside its first foldable iPhone. The standard iPhone 18, however, is said to arrive later in spring 2027 with the iPhone 18e. While the lineup is expected to get more RAM, the upgrade may still fall short of what the standard and 18e models need for two advanced Siri AI features.

The issue is Apple’s AFM Core Advanced model. It powers Advanced Dictation Preview in iOS 27, along with Apple’s new expressive Siri voices. The model runs locally on supported devices, but it needs at least 12GB of RAM.

Read more