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Ugh, Android phones all look the same again

Published Feb 7th, 2020 8:21AM EST
Android Vs iPhone
Image: quietbits/Shutterstock

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Once upon a time, smartphones were like snowflakes and no two models looked the same. This is going back to what we like to call “the before time,” when smartphones still had these annoying little things all over them called buttons. Most smartphones didn’t even have touchscreens and the ones that did used resistive technology that only really worked with a stylus. Can you even imagine? Then the iPhone came along and in most ways, smartphones changed for the better. Buttons were slowly cast aside and replaced by larger capacitive touchscreens. Smartphone platforms were simplified as Android followed Apple’s lead and every other mobile OS disintegrated. On-device app portals like the iOS App Store replaced third-party stores that required you to buy apps on a PC and then sync them to your smartphone. And so on. But there’s one way that the smartphone market took a few steps back following the original iPhone’s introduction in 2007: Phones all started to look the same.

In the early days following the iPhone’s release, phones all looked the same because other smartphone makers blatantly and shamelessly stole Apple’s designs. Remember when Samsung literally wrote a book about how to copy the iPhone pixel by pixel? A series of huge lawsuits changed things for a while, but then the iPhone X came along in 2017 and nearly every single Android phone maker on the planet copied Apple’s new design. Take a look at this picture, which shows 20 embarrassing Android-powered iPhone X rip-offs all in one image.

That was a wake-up call of sorts for Android vendors, and it sent them all off in their own directions beginning in late 2018. We saw innovative new solutions like pop-up selfie cameras and even smartphones with second screens on the back. It was glorious… and then it was over.

After a brief period of innovation as Android phone makers looked for unique ways to get as close as possible to a true all-screen design, companies are now falling back into old habits. The good news is that this time around, they’re not copying Apple. That would be impossible since Apple is still using the same old iPhone design it has been using since way back in 2017, and Android phone vendors have already moved on. Instead, they’re copying each other this time around. But the end result is all too familiar: Android phones are all starting to look the same again.

Have you not noticed? Well, let’s take a look at some smartphones that are set to be released in the coming months, beginning with Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy S20 series:

Here’s the upcoming new Samsung Galaxy A11 that just leaked on Thursday:

Image source: 91mobiles

Here’s an unnamed 5G Motorola smartphone set to launch in the coming months, which leaked earlier this week:

Image source: xda-developers

Here’s the OnePlus 8 that will debut shortly:

Here’s the display glass from the upcoming Oppo Find X2:

Image source: Weibo

Here’s the Huawei P40 Pro that has leaked on Weibo and elsewhere:

Image source: Weibo

Remember the Galaxy S10+ from last year?

Image source: Zach Epstein, BGR

I could go on and on, but I’m pretty sure you get the idea at this point. Every single one of these smartphones (and many others) have the same basic design characterized by curved sides, narrow bezels, and a hole-punch display. How ironic is it, by the way, that Samsung was the first smartphone maker to use this design and now every other Android vendor is copying it? Samsung wrote the book on stealing smartphone designs, and now its own design is being stolen left and right.

The good news is that generally speaking, this is a pretty sweet look for a smartphone. These handsets all have nice big displays and all-screen designs that are quite immersive. It’s still very disappointing that there was a brief period of design innovation from all these companies beginning in late 2018, but now it’s already over and they’re back to doing what they apparently do best.

Zach Epstein
Zach Epstein Executive Editor

Zach Epstein has been the Executive Editor at BGR for more than 15 years. He manages BGR’s editorial team and ensures that best practices are adhered to. He also oversees the Ecommerce team and directs the daily flow of all content. Zach first joined BGR in 2007 as a Staff Writer covering business, technology, and entertainment.

His work has been quoted by countless top news organizations, and he was recently named one of the world's top 10 “power mobile influencers” by Forbes. Prior to BGR, Zach worked as an executive in marketing and business development with two private telcos.