Unlike too limited “children” phones, fusion X1 looks like a classic Android model. Except that everything is not accessible by default: social networks and the web browser are blocked until parents activate them. And with the XPlora app, they can manage many other things remotely: authorize certain apps, set screen time limits, see the telephone location or even check your battery level. There is also a “school” mode that cuts distractions during lessons, history that the teen does not spend the day scrolling instead of listening in class.
A smartphone not gadget
Adam Ferguson, product marketing manager at HMD, explains: “ We wanted a phone that teens agree to use, while reassuring parents. If young people must have restrictions, there must be a balance. »
Fusion X1 is not just a bridged phone (dice), it is also a powerful smartphone. It has a 6.56 inch screen (HD+, 90 Hz), a Snapdragon 4 Gen 2 processor, up to 8 GB of RAM and 256 GB of storage storage. On the photo side, it sends heavy with a main 108 Mpx sensor and a 50 MP selfie camera. It is also equipped with a 5,000 mAh battery with 33W fast load, just to hold all day stressless.
Little more: it is modular. Its “fusion” design allows you to hang accessories such as a gaming module, a light ring for selfies or an additional battery. A good way to personalize it as needed.
HMD’s goal is not just to sell a smartphone “restrained” to stressed parents, but to offer real progression in digital learning. The restrictions can soften over time and communication between parents and children is at the heart of the project.
Besides, HMD does not intend to stop there. After the merger X1, the brand provides an even more supervised model for the youngest, and another more open for older teens. It is a way of supporting families in the evolution of the relationship to screens, without imposing brutal restrictions or transforming the phone into a frustration machine.
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