Tech fans who keep a close eye on their Google News feeds will have seen that it’s been an overwhelmingly busy week for new smartphones. We started with the annual smartphone conference MWC 2026 (here’s my pick of the best smartphones of MWC 2026), and quickly moved onto the unveiling of the iPhone 17e. But they were all of them deceived, for another phone was made.

In any usual week, an iPhone release would be big news, but this wasn’t that week. Shortly after the iPhone 17‘s budget cousin dropped, we saw one other phone which completely stole Apple‘s thunder: the Nothing Phone (4a).

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warm-up for the MacBook Neo.

This new laptop from Apple costs the same as the iPhone 17e: that’s cheap for a MacBook. It’s something totally new for Apple, as opposed to ‘yet another mid-range iPhone’, so it’s only natural that the new handheld has been a little overlooked.

But that attention cannibalization has worked the other way for the Nothing Phone (4a). The company has announced it won’t be releasing a top-end phone this year, so the affordable model is even more important for fans of the brand.

As an Android user, take this next statement with a pinch of salt: I think Apple has dug a hole for itself. Neo notwithstanding, too many of its mobile devices over the last few years have felt iterative, with a new chip and not much else changed.

It’s as though the company feels compelled towards annual releases, dropping the same product with tweaked specs, and it’s stopped new iPhones and iPads feeling special like they did a few years ago.

Compare it to AirPods: their slower release means the unveiling of a new model is a more important event. E-series iPhones were more interesting when they came about every few years.

So it’s hard to say if the iPhone 16e‘s successor would be an exciting release on any given Sunday, but it’s certainly not when the week began with top-end super-cameras, folding mobiles and concept phones, and wrapped up with the new best cheap phones to beat. But then again, Apple’s hardly alone in boring us with iterative updates these days…