If the iPhone is a sports car and the Galaxy S is a luxury SUV, the was a steel bicycle—unbreakable, slow, and exactly what you need when the road gets rough.
But the story has conflict. Users quickly discovered the Achilles' heel: the eMMC storage . The 32GB or 64GB internal memory used a slow, old standard. Installing apps was fine, but opening the camera took 4 seconds. Swiping to the Google Feed took 3 seconds. The Helio P22, while efficient, was a laggard. Multitasking between Spotify and Maps caused stutters. nokia 2.4
This was the Nokia 2.4’s soul. It ran Android 10 Go Edition (later upgradable to Android 11 and 12). "Go" meant lighter apps, a stripped-down interface, and less background junk. It meant that even with 2GB of RAM, the phone never truly froze—it just crawled politely. If the iPhone is a sports car and
The back housed a dual-camera setup: a 13MP main sensor paired with a 2MP depth sensor. Critics laughed—where was the ultra-wide? The telephoto? But Nokia didn’t care. The 2MP sensor wasn't for zooming; it was for the "portrait mode" feature, blurring backgrounds behind your kids or pets. The 32GB or 64GB internal memory used a slow, old standard
Eventually, the Nokia 2.5 and 3.4 replaced it. But for those two years (2020–2022), the 2.4 was proof that a phone doesn't need to be fast to be faithful . It did exactly what it promised: it didn't die quickly, it didn't spy aggressively, and it didn't cost a month’s rent.
The fingerprint sensor? It was mounted on the back, under the camera. It worked, but slowly. Many users reported needing to tap twice. The charging port was micro-USB, not USB-C—a glaring sign of cost-cutting in a world moving toward reversible plugs.
The Nokia 2.4 wasn’t trying to be beautiful; it was trying to be tough . It arrived with a polycarbonate shell—Nokia’s trademark “durable plastic.” The back featured a subtle nano-texture to prevent slips, and the frame was reinforced to survive drops from waist height.