Affinity Designer (Serif Labs) is a powerful vector/raster hybrid, available via a one-time purchase rather than a subscription. It offers full control over vector nodes, smooth gradients, and precise export capabilities, making it ideal for logo creation and multi-output design workflows Atomic SpinTechRadar.
Sketch (by Sketch B.V.) is macOS-exclusive and built for UI/UX designers. It excels with its intuitive grid system, Auto Layout, and reusable components, streamlining responsive design workflows Sketch Community ForumSkylum.
Reddit users note:
“Sketch is UI design software… but Affinity Designer is both Illustrator and Photoshop.”
“Affinity Designer offers advanced mirroring and export tools, while Sketch remains unbeatable for layout grids.” RedditSketch Community Forum
Alternatives Worth Knowing
Paid, Feature-Rich Tools
Adobe Illustrator — The industry-standard vector tool. More expensive but unmatched if you're embedded in the Adobe ecosystem G2Skylum.
CorelDRAW Graphics Suite — A versatile design suite with strong typography and illustration tools SkylumSoftwareWorld.
Xara Designer Pro+ — Fast, user-friendly, with integrated vector and photo tools—ideal for all-in-one design flows Wikipedia.
Free & Open-Source
Inkscape — A top-tier vector editor that’s open source and supports SVG, powerful path tools, and scripting WikipediaTechRadar.
GIMP — A Photoshop-like free raster editor. Great for photo editing but less seamless for vector workflows Software AdviceTechRadar.
Gravit Designer & Lunacy — Lightweight, cross-platform vector tools. Ideal for quick UI or graphic tasks, with Lunacy offering Sketch file compatibility G2Female SwitchSoftware Advice.
Web-Based & Template-Focused
Canva — Drag-and-drop, template-driven design platform—great for social media visuals and brand content Software AdviceLifewire.
Vectr — Simplified browser vector editor; collaborative but limited in advanced features LifewireTechRadar.
Kittl — A rising web design platform combining templates, vector tools, and AI—all in browser, growing fast with millions of users Wikipedia.
Boxy SVG — Minimalist SVG editor with filters and vector conversion; simple and web-friendly Wikipedia.
AI & Platform Highlights
According to TechRadar’s recent roundup:
Affinity Designer 2 is celebrated for powerful vector and raster tools, one-time pricing, and its worthiness vs. subscriptions TechRadar.
Free picks include GIMP for editing flexibility and Canva for intuitive templated designs TechRadarLifewire.
Learn why flip phones still matter in 2025, and how you can build and launch web apps for these tiny devices.
Flip phones aren’t dead. On the contrary, 200+ million non-smartphones are sold annually. That’s roughly equivalent to the number of iPhones sold in 2024. Even in the United States, millions of flip phones are sold each year. As network operators struggle to shut down 2G service,
new incentives are offered to encourage device upgrades that further
increase demand for budget-friendly flip phones. This is especially true
across South Asia and Africa, where an iPhone is unaffordable for the
vast majority of the population (it takes two months of work on an average Indian salary to afford the cheapest iPhone).
Like
their “smart” counterparts, flip phones (technically, this category is
called “Feature Phones”) are becoming increasingly more capable. They
now offer features you’d expect from a smartphone, like 4G, WiFi,
Bluetooth, and the ability to run apps. If you are targeting users in
South Asia and Africa, or niches in Europe and North America, there are
flip phone app platforms like Cloud Phone and KaiOS.
Building for these platforms is similar to developing a Progressive Web
App (PWA), with distribution managed across several app stores.
Jargon Busting Flip
phones go by many names. Non-smartphones are jokingly called “dumb
phones”. The technology industry calls this device category “feature
phones”. Regionally, they are also known as button phones or basic
mobiles in Europe, and keypad mobiles in India. They all share a few
traits: they are budget phones with small screens and physical buttons.
Why Build Apps For Flip Phones?
It’s
a common misconception that people who use flip phones do not want
apps. In fact, many first-time internet users are eager to discover new
content and services. While this market isn’t as lucrative as Apple’s
App Store, there are a few reasons why you should build for flip phones.
Organic Growth You do not need to pay to acquire flip phone users. Unlike Android or IOS, where the cost per install (CPI) averages around $2.5-3.3 per install according to GoGoChart, flip phone apps generate substantial organic downloads.
Brand Introduction When
flip phone users eventually upgrade to smartphones, they will search
for the apps they are already familiar with. This will, in turn,
generate more installs on the Google Play Store and, to a lesser extent,
the Apple App Store.
Low Competition There are ~1,700 KaiOS apps and fewer Cloud Phone widgets. Meanwhile, Google Play has over 1.55 million Android apps to choose from. It is much easier to stand out as one in a thousand than one in a million.
Technical Foundations
Flip phones could not always run apps. It wasn’t until the Ovi Store
(later renamed to the “Nokia Store”) launched in 2009, a year after
Apple’s flagship iPhone launched, that flip phones got installable,
third-party applications. At the time, apps were written for the
fragmented Java 2 Mobile Edition (J2ME) runtime, available only on
select Nokia models, and often required integration with
poorly-documented, proprietary packages like the Nokia UI API.
Today, flip phone platforms have rejected native runtimes in favor of standard web technologies
in an effort to reduce barriers to entry and attract a wider pool of
software developers. Apps running on modern flip phones are primarily
written in languages many developers are familiar with — HTML, CSS, and
JavaScript — and with them, a set of trade-offs and considerations.
Hardware
Flip
phones are affordable because they use low-end, often outdated,
hardware. On the bottom end are budget phones with a real-time operating
system (RTOS) running on chips like the Unisoc T107
with as little as 16MB of RAM. These phones typically support Opera
Mini and Cloud Phone. At the upper end is the recently-released TCL Flip 4 running KaiOS 4.0 on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 4s with 1GB of RAM.
While
it is difficult to accurately compare such different hardware, Apple’s
latest iPhone 16 Pro has 500x more memory (8GB RAM) and supports
download speeds up to 1,000x faster than a low-end flip phone (4G LTE
CAT-1).
Performance
You might think that
flip phone apps are easily limited by the scarce available resources of
budget hardware. This is the case for KaiOS, since apps are executed on
the device. Code needs to be minified, thumbnails downsized, and
performance evaluated across a range of real devices. You cannot simply
test on your desktop with a small viewport.
However, as remote browsers,
both Cloud Phone and Opera Mini overcome hardware constraints by
offloading computationally expensive rendering to servers. This means performance is generally comparable to modern desktops, but can lead to a few quirky and, at times, unintuitive characteristics.
For
instance, if your app fetches a 1MB file to display a data table, this
does not consume 1MB of the user’s mobile data. Only changes to the
screen contents get streamed to the user, consuming bandwidth. On the
other hand, data is consumed by complex animations and page transitions,
because each frame is at least a partial screen refresh. Despite this
quirk, Opera Mini estimates it saves up to 90% of data compared to conventional browsers.
Security
Do not store sensitive data
in browser storage. This holds true for flip phones, where the security
concerns are similar to those of traditional web browsers. Although
apps cannot generally access data from other apps, KaiOS does not
encrypt client-side data. The implications are different for remote
browsers.
Despite
their staying power, these devices go largely ignored by nearly every
web development framework and library. Popular front-end web frameworks
like Bootstrap v5 categorize all screens below 576px as extra small. Another popular choice, Tailwind,
sets the smallest CSS breakpoint — a specific width where the layout
changes to accommodate an optimal viewing experience across different
devices — even higher at 40em (640px). Design industry experts like Norman Nielsen suggest the smallest breakpoint,
“is intended for mobile and generally is up to 500px.” Standards like
these advocate for a one-size-fits-all approach on small screens, but
some small design changes can make a big difference for new internet
users.
Small screens vary considerably in size, resolution, contrast, and brightness.
Shrinks poorly: Screenshots of A List Apart, Chrome for Developers, and MDN Web Docs on Cloud Phone. (Large preview)Shrinks well: Screenshots of Rest of World, BBC News, and TED Talks on Cloud Phone.
Most websites render too large for flip phones.
They use fonts that are too big, graphics that are too detailed, and
sticky headers that occupy a quarter of the screen. To make matters
worse, many websites disable horizontal scrolling
by hiding content that overflows horizontally. This allows for smooth
scrolling on a touchscreen, but also makes it impossible to read text
that extends beyond the viewport on flip phones.
The table below
includes physical display size, resolution, and examples to better
understand the diversity of small screens across flip phones and budget
smartphones.
Note: Flip
phones have small screens typically between 1.8”–2.8” with a resolution
of 240x320 (QVGA) or 128x160 (QQVGA). For comparison, an Apple Watch
Series 10 has a 1.8” screen with a resolution of 416x496. By modern
standards, flip phone displays are small with low resolution, pixel
density, contrast, and brightness.
Develop For Small Screens
Add
custom, named breakpoints to your framework’s defaults, rather than
manually using media queries to override layout dimensions defined by
classes.
Bootstrap v5
Bootstrap defines a map, $grid-breakpoints, in the _variables.scss Sass file that contains the default breakpoints from SM (576px) to XXL (1400px). Use the map-merge() function to extend the default and add your own breakpoint.
Successful
flip phone apps support keyboard navigation using the directional pad
(D-pad). This is the same navigation pattern as TV remotes: four arrow
keys (up, down, left, right) and the central button. To build a great
flip phone-optimized app, provide a navigation scheme
where the user can quickly learn how to navigate your app using these
limited controls. Ensure users can navigate to all visible controls on
the screen.
Navigating PodLP using d-pad (left) and a virtual cursor (right).
Although
some flip phone platforms support spatial navigation using an emulated
cursor, it is not universally available and creates a worse user
experience. Moreover, while apps that support keyboard navigation will
work with an emulated cursor, this isn’t necessarily true the other way
around. Opera Mini Native only offers a virtual cursor, Cloud Phone only
offers spatial navigation, and KaiOS supports both.
If you develop with keyboard accessibility in mind, supporting flip phone navigation is easy. As general guidelines, never remove a focus outline. Instead, override default styles and use box shadows
to match your app’s color scheme while fitting appropriately. Autofocus
on the first item in a sequence — list or grid — but be careful to
avoid keyboard traps. Finally, make sure that the lists scroll the newly-focused item completely into view.
Don’t Make Users Type
If
you have ever been frustrated typing a long message on your smartphone,
only to have it accidentally erased, now imagine that frustration when
you typed the message using T9
on a flip phone. Despite advancements in predictive typing, it’s a
chore to fill forms and compose even a single 180-character Tweet with
just nine keys.
Whatever you do, don’t make flip phone users type!
Fortunately, it is easy to adapt designs to require less typing. Prefer numbers whenever possible.
Allow users to register using their phone number (which is easy to
type), send a PIN code or one-time password (OTPs) that contains only
numbers, and look up address details from a postal code. Each of these
saves tremendous time and avoids frustration that often leads to user
attrition.
Alternatively, integrate with single-sign-on (SSO)
providers to “Log in with Google,” so users do not have to retype
passwords that security teams require to be at least eight characters
long and contain a letter, number, and symbol. Just keep in mind that
many new internet users won’t have an email address. They may not know
how to access it, or their phone might not be able to access emails.
Finally, allow users to search by voice
when it is available. As difficult as it is typing English using T9,
it’s much harder typing a language like Tamil, which has over 90M
speakers across South India and Sri Lanka. Despite decades of
advancement, technologies like auto-complete and predictive typing are
seldom available for such languages. While imperfect, there are AI
models like Whisper Tamil that can perform speech-to-text, thanks to researchers at universities like the Speech Lab at IIT Madras.
Flip Phone Browsers And Operating Systems
Another challenge with developing web apps for flip phones is their fragmented ecosystem.
Various companies have used different approaches to allow websites and
apps to run on limited hardware. There are at least three major
web-based platforms that all operate differently:
Cloud Phone is the most recent solution, launched in December 2023, using a modern Puffin (Chromium) based remote browser that serves as an app store.
KaiOS, launched in 2016 using Firefox OS as its foundation, is a mobile operating system where the entire system is a web browser.
Opera Mini Native is by far the oldest, launched in 2005 as an ad-supported remote browser that still uses the decade-old, discontinued Presto engine.
Although both platforms are remote browsers, there are significant differences between Cloud Phone and Opera Mini that are not immediately apparent.
Left to right: Nokia 6300 4G (KaiOS), Viettel Sumo 4G V1S (Cloud Phone), and Itel Neo R60+ (Opera Mini).
Flip
phones have come a long way, but each platform supports different
capabilities. You may need to remove or scale back features based on
what is supported. It is best to target the lowest common denominator that is feasible for your application.
For
information-heavy news websites, wikis, or blogs, Opera Mini’s outdated
technology works well enough. For video streaming services, both Cloud
Phone and KaiOS work well. Conversely, remote browsers like Opera Mini
and Cloud Phone cannot handle high frame rates, so only KaiOS is
suitable for real-time interactive games. Just like with design, there
is no one-size-fits-all approach to flip phone development. Even though
all platforms are web-based, they require different tradeoffs.
Tiny Screens, Big Impact
The
flip phone market is growing, particularly for 4G-enabled models.
Reliance’s JioPhone is among the most successful models, selling more
than 135 million units
of its flagship KaiOS-enabled phone. The company plans to increase 4G
flip phone rollout steadily as it migrates India’s 250 million 2G users
to 4G and 5G.
Estimates
of the total active flip phone market size are difficult to come by,
and harder still to find a breakdown by platform. KaiOS claims to enable
“over 160 million phones worldwide,” while “over 300 million people use Opera Mini to stay connected.” Just a year after launch, Cloud Phone states that, “one million Cloud Phone users
already access the service from 90 countries.” By most estimates, there
are already hundreds of millions of web-enabled flip phone users eager
to discover new products and services.
Conclusion
Hundreds
of millions still rely on flip phones to stay connected. Yet, these
users go largely ignored even by products that target emerging markets. Modern software development often prioritizes the latest and greatest over finding ways to affordably serve more than 2.6 billion unconnected people. If you are not designing for small screens using keyboard navigation, you’re shutting out an entire population from accessing your service.
Flip phones still matter in 2025.
With ongoing network transitions, millions will upgrade, and millions
more will connect for the first time using 4G flip phones. This creates
an opportunity to put your app into the hands of the newly connected.
And thanks to modern remote browser technology, it is now easier than
ever to build and launch your app on flip phones without costly and
time-consuming optimizations to function on low-end hardware.