What you need to know
- Carl Pei publicly challenged Apple, saying Nothing plans to win over “bored” iPhone users one switch at a time.
- Nothing continues to position itself as the anti-Apple brand, arguing that modern smartphones have become repetitive and uninspired.
- Nothing’s planned expansion through Best Buy could give the brand a stronger foothold in the US and expose more consumers to its products.
Nothing founder Carl Pei just looked straight into an Instagram camera and declared war on Cupertino. In his latest, highly dramatic social media stunt, Pei said: “This is a message to Apple. My name is Carl. I make phones in London. I’m gonna steal your customers. One bored iPhone user at a time.”
This is peak Pei, but the heart of his message taps into a very real feeling. Pei has been aggressive from the start, positioning Nothing as the ultimate anti-Apple brand. He thinks the smartphone business has flatlined, arguing that Apple lost its creative spark years ago and that modern glass slabs have become far too repetitive.
Instead, this company builds the safe, predictable phones your parents use and mixes eye-catching transparent hardware designs with heavily customized, deeply stylized software to breathe some life back into the market. This is a classic David vs. Goliath playbook.
That said, Nothing is still a relatively minor blip on the global radar compared to the massive volumes Apple, Samsung, Xiaomi, and OPPO move on a daily basis. It’s always easier to double your market share when you’re starting from zero.
If Pei actually wants to steal those bored iPhone owners, he needs to meet them where they shop. That’s precisely what is happening next. Nothing recently announced plans to significantly expand its US retail presence through Best Buy. And the threat of American consumers getting their hands on physical hardware is a much more tangible threat to Apple and Samsung’s dominance than any Instagram video could ever be.
Android Central’s Take
We desperately need wildcards in the smartphone space to keep the titans from getting lazy, and more weird, transparent hardware on store shelves is an undeniable win for buyers tired of identical glass rectangles. But flashing LED lights and a fancy dot-matrix font are not going to magically shatter the iron grip of iMessage, AirDrop, and the Apple Watch ecosystem. Pei can grandstand to his fanboys all he wants, but until Nothing builds a services ecosystem that actually locks users in like Apple’s walled garden, this “war” is just a shiny marketing gimmick.


