Nothing’s next midrange phone is starting to look less mysterious by the day. Ahead of its July 7 launch, a fresh leak fills in several blanks for the Nothing Phone (4b), including a 6.7-inch AMOLED display, Snapdragon 6 Gen 4 chip, 5,400mAh battery, and two storage variants.
The company has already shown off the design and confirmed the phone’s name, but it has been careful about the specs. That’s a familiar playbook for Nothing: drip-feed the visuals, let benchmarks do some of the talking, and keep the final card close until launch day. It keeps the hype machine warm, even if it also invites the usual speculation circus.
Nothing Phone (4b) leaked specs
According to the leak, the Phone (4b) will use a 6.7-inch AMOLED panel with a 120Hz refresh rate. The chipset is said to be Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 6 Gen 4, which matches an earlier Geekbench appearance that also pointed to 8GB of RAM and Android 16-based Nothing OS.
- 6.7-inch AMOLED display
- 120Hz refresh rate
- Snapdragon 6 Gen 4 chipset
- 8GB RAM
- Android 16-based Nothing OS
Camera, battery, and storage options
On the back, the phone is tipped to carry a dual-camera setup led by a 50-megapixel main sensor. Nothing has already confirmed there will be two rear cameras, so this part of the leak mostly sharpens the picture rather than changing it.
The battery is said to be 5,400mAh, which is the sort of number that should make the phone more than comfortable for a full day of use. Storage is expected in 8GB + 128GB and 8GB + 256GB versions, while three color options are mentioned, with a light blue finish already shown by the company.
- 8GB + 128GB
- 8GB + 256GB
- Three color options, including light blue
Glyph Bar replaces the full light strip
Nothing has also confirmed that the Phone (4b) will ditch the full Glyph Interface for a smaller horizontal Glyph Bar. It will still handle notifications, charging status, and app alerts, which sounds like a more restrained version of the company’s signature trick rather than a retreat.
The Geekbench listing tied the device to model number A005 and showed single-core and multi-core scores of 1,088 and 3,155. Nothing is expected to reveal pricing and availability on July 7, and that is where the real test begins: specs are nice, but midrange buyers usually care more about whether the phone feels sharp, looks different, and lands at the right price than about benchmark vanity.

