Anonymous1017 Some positive news, but I still want to suggest that the company should follow the update on the same day for every model. Indeed, you roll out in phases to know about issues or any technical glitches that may hit. But then, what’s the meaning of releasing a “Stable Release,” that too after a month or two of beta testing?
Nothing had this chance, and yet they failed. On 21 Nov 2025, I don’t think the company would say something extraordinary.
Advertisement and hype marketing is the passion of Nothing. That’s it. Phones and update policies are still lame.
I hope in India they face a severe backlash and no more customers at all. And mark my words, it will happen in the next year for sure if Nothing keeps such stupid services continued.
Staged rollouts aren’t that bad. literally every smartphone brand does them. Samsung, OnePlus, Xiaomi, Nothing… it’s the industry standard. You don’t push a major update to millions of phones at once without checking if it breaks something first. That’s just asking for chaos. So yeah, the outrage over that part doesn’t really make sense.
Where I do agree, though, is that Nothing’s customer support desperately needs work. Their multi-brand service centers often seem undertrained, and plenty of people have gotten their phones back with extra scratches or even cracks and it’s something the company really needs to fix ASAP.
Anonymous1017 As of now, so-called premium phones are flopped in the Indian market.
Saying “flagship devices flopped in India” is just not true. The premium segment here has been booming. iPhone sales have exploded over the last couple of years… clearly, people are buying expensive phones. Nothing Phone 3 didn’t flop because India hates flagships… it flopped because it was a “budget flagship” pretending to be a true flagship. People saw through that pretty quickly.
Anonymous1017 Wait… as the owner is Chinese origin, and in China NO 4 (sì) is considered unlucky—similar to (sî)…
I think that’s why this is happening…
With sì nothing will sî.
RIP in advance.
And the whole “number 4” theory… come on!! Sure, some Chinese companies avoid using the number 4 in product names, but they’re not skipping entire Android versions because of superstition. OnePlus didn’t skip Android 14 or OxygenOS 14. Version numbers exist for a reason… skipping one because of bad luck would just make Nothing look silly.