Commodore has trimmed the price of its retro-style Callback 8020 after buyers pushed back hard on the original $500 tag. The foldable phone now starts at $400 for most preorders, with an extra $50 discount for early customers bringing it down to $350 – still not cheap, but a lot less awkward for a device with very modest hardware.

The company made two clear trade-offs to get there. Wired headphones are no longer bundled and will be sold separately, while the base model now uses refurbished memory chips pulled from older motherboards instead of new parts. More expensive versions will still get new memory, which is a neat way of saying: pay up if you want the less scrappy build.

What the Commodore Callback 8020 gets

The specs help explain why the original pricing raised eyebrows. The Commodore Callback 8020 comes with a 3.25-inch display, a MediaTek Helio G81 chip, 4 GB of RAM, and 64 GB of storage. That is perfectly serviceable for a budget handset, but it is also the sort of spec sheet that invites comparison with phones that cost far less and do far more.

Commodore’s earlier defense was straightforward: the phone was built almost from scratch, from the case and motherboard to a modified Sailfish OS-based software stack. The company also pointed to rising RAM and flash prices, plus relatively small production volumes measured in tens of thousands rather than the hundreds of thousands that bigger brands can churn out. Fair enough – but consumers rarely pay extra for admirable internal complexity if the outside experience still looks like 2019 bargain-bin hardware.

Retro charm only gets you so far

That tension is the real story here. Nostalgia sells, but only up to the point where the price stops feeling like a tribute and starts feeling like a tax. The Callback 8020 now has a better shot at finding buyers who want the Commodore name and the retro format without having to defend the purchase to themselves afterward.

The bigger question is whether the lower entry price is enough to make the phone look competitive against the flood of inexpensive Android devices that already offer more conventional value. If Commodore can keep the early discount visible long enough, the Callback 8020 may avoid becoming a punchline before it ships.

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