Born in 1996. I remember when I was little, I used to play games like the classic snake on my grandmother's Nokia 3310 and I remember one with an orange ball. This particular phone brought back memories of my childhood. Fast forward to 2021, military service. I hear a thousand and two things from cousins, friends, acquaintances about what to bring and what not to bring with you. I say let them talk because the treatment and comfort for soldiers change from camp to camp, so I did the usual. That was to buy a phone without a camera so that I could have peace of mind, at least for the first 20-something days of basic training (because there is no stealing once you go to a unit). I won't go into too much detail, this particular phone works everywhere because it doesn't have a camera. It has very good colors, a flashlight on top that illuminates strongly at night (for those of you who hit the target and want to hear what or who is inside the pitch-black night), it only supports regular SIM (the big one). It doesn't take memory expansion, but you don't need it. Since the device is only for calls, text messages, and that's it. Like the old mobile phones before they became pocket computers. The phone comes in black, blue, and pink. Personally, I bought the black one because it will get dirty enough in the military. So that nothing on the device stands out too much. It will also keep you company with the radio in the scope.
Positives in conclusion:
Vibrant colors
It has games like snake, shooting aliens with a spaceship, collecting falling gifts, and Tetris.
Very loud sound in calls and a very good microphone, I had no problem, my parents could hear me everywhere.
The phone has a sturdy construction, it fell out of my pocket over the tower before I made the first test jump with a parachute, and after the kids found the battery and the back cover and put them back together, it worked fine along with the screen.
The phone is only for messages and calls.
The radio works everywhere.
Also, even though it is 2G, I had no problem with signal reception, it was always perfect.
Negatives:
It is not a modern phone for those who are younger and look at it, forget about social media and the internet in general.
It doesn't play music or take memory expansion.
I hope I helped soldiers who are looking for something affordable (at least for the first 20 days of service, after that, bring your own regular phone) because depending on the camp, you don't know who you will be with during your service. I recommend it to prospective soldiers and elderly relatives.
My life has come full circle with the same family of mobile phones, which is quite funny :) From 5-6 to 25, Nokia.
3/12/2021: I went through all of basic training with this phone. I have to say that if you talk a lot on the phone, the battery will drain quickly. It is best to use it mainly for SMS, which are easier since you don't give permissions or risk getting caught by an officer with the phone in your hand. With just SMS and checking the time, the battery easily lasts for a week. If you talk to your parents for 30+ minutes, the battery easily loses 25% or more. I noticed this clearly during the first 20 days of training. Now that I have graduation leave, I have to say that it is a very good choice because when an officer shows up, you can easily hide it due to its small size under your tunic with just a flick of your fingers and it disappears. But you should enter afterwards with a regular mobile phone because personally I entered with the mindset that they don't allow smartphones and ended up being the only one with a phone that does nothing more than the basic functions of a mobile phone. So as advice, in order not to get bored in the first few days, take your regular mobile phone with you, but have it on you when you go to your ranking and keep the old one in your bag in case they check it because they didn't even see mine inside. They just opened it. So don't enter so confidently like me, things have changed a lot now.