HMD may not be a brand youβve heard before, but you know the phones it made: yep, those Nokia smartphones and feature phones (or βdumb phonesβ, colloquially). Now, the Finnish company is officially entering Malaysia as itself, selling Android smartphones branded as βHMDβ.
HMD Enters Malaysia With Two New Smartphones

All of the Nokia phones youβve seen in recent years are made by them β since the companyβs establishment in late 2016, HMD has acquired the licensing needed to produce phones on Nokiaβs behalf. The former phone giant exited the business permanently to fully venture into advanced telecommunications technologies, but its phones lived on, some of which includes remakes of the greatest hits such as 3310, 8110 βbanana phoneβ, and so on.


So what is HMD bringing into Malaysia, sans Nokia? Youβre looking at the new HMD Skyline and Pulse series. For the Pulse lineup, the company puts such emphasis on repairability that it has given it a generational number, and the current lineup are designated as βGen 1 repairability.β Spare parts can be obtained via iFixit, which then can be replace broken parts at home β so your phoneβs lifespan will less likely be at the mercy of planned obsolescence.

As for the HMD Skyline (available this September), the smartphone was advertised with things like βinspired by the βBrat Girlβ trend of this summer,β βcheeky, mischievous, and unafraid to break the rules.β Showers of adjectives aside, this mid-range smartphone packs a 50-megapixel front camera, plus a 108MP OIS main shooter paired with a telephoto and an ultrawide lens at the back. It also comes with something called βDetox Modeβ, which is a digital detox feature that prevents you from doomscrolling your feeds.
Currently, only one model will be sold here, which is the HMD Pulse Pro (available August 30). It will be available in Black and Purple for the price of RM739, which includes 8+8GB RAM and a 256GB storage. Other HMD-branded phones will be introduced at a later date via its existing distributor for Nokia-branded devices, Zitron Fulfilment Sdn Bhd.
One more thing: HMD assures while it introduces its own brand to the smartphone market, it will βcontinue to sellβ Nokia devices β so nothing is changed on this part. According to the company, this is βpart of a multi-brand vision,β which likely mimics the business models of Chinese smartphone giants, including Xiaomi (with its Redmi and Poco sub-brand), Oppo (realme and OnePlus), and vivo (iQOO).
Pokdepinion: A huge win if we can get spare parts here as well. About time smartphones get user-repairable!
