I sometimes need all the horsepower afforded by a flagship smartphone, like when I'm doing on-the-scene coverage of live events (remember those?). Tweeting, snapping photos, uploading images from my mirrorless camera to my phone, taking notes, jotting down questions, and responding to team members on Slack simultaneously can be taxing—for me, sure, but especially for the device I'm using. The beefy processors and boatloads of RAM in pricier phones make these fast-paced moments fluid and frustration-free.
But these days, I'm not doing nearly as much with my phone. I browse Twitter, read Reddit, take some photos over the weekend, send emails and messages, watch shows before bed, and maybe play a mobile game or two. I don't need apps to open in milliseconds anymore, and I don't need super-fast app switching. Chances are, most people don't need those things either, even on their busiest days. The Nokia 5.3, a sub-$200 Android phone, might meet all of the performance requirements that most of us demand from a mobile device.
Cheap phones are getting better than ever. Since the beginning of 2020, we've been arguing that you do not need to spend $1,000 to get a good smartphone. This Nokia is just another great example of the trend. It has some compromises, which are inevitable at its $200 price. But if your budget can't budge, this is the best bang for your buck.
HMD, the company that makes the phones sold under the Nokia brand name, closely competes with Motorola in the budget device space. Both companies have several offerings at the low end of the Android market. However, HMD's phones have some significant strengths that also happen to expose the biggest weaknesses of Motorola's devices.





