In a world obsessed with glass sandwiches and hidden screws, the JerryRigEverything x Nothing Dream Phone dares to wear its insides on the outside—and we mean that literally. Designed by the imaginative minds at Tektura Studio, this concept piece envisions what YouTuber and durability-test legend Zack Nelson (a.k.a. JerryRigEverything) would want from a flagship device.
The result? A phone that trades marketing fluff for pure mechanical truth, while still keeping Nothing’s now-iconic transparent aesthetic alive and thriving.
While the Nothing Phone (3) is rumored to abandon the glyph interface and adopt a more traditional flagship profile (triple-camera setup, telephoto lens, \$1000+ price tag), the JRE Dream Phone plays a different tune. It doesn’t scream for attention through LEDs; instead, it whispers durability through exposed screws, structural reinforcements, and bold transparency.
The back of the phone, as seen in the concept render you shared, showcases an exaggerated teardown aesthetic—almost like the entire back panel is a frozen moment from one of Jerry’s videos. A matte aluminum battery shield stamped with both the Nothing logo and JerryRigEverything branding occupies the bottom half, marked with engineering data and a fabrication date. This isn’t just homage; it’s storytelling.
The visual palette is aggressively industrial—think “NASA engineering bay meets Swiss watch.” Large visible screws anchor each corner, boldly rejecting glue and proprietary fasteners. There’s a tactile honesty to it, like an open-source manifesto cast in glass and metal.
The triple-camera island at the top is dead center, emphasizing symmetry and mechanical balance. Its spine-like vertical alignment doubles as both functional placement and aesthetic signature—suggesting a phone meant to endure the surgical scrutiny of Jerry’s infamous scratch, burn, and bend tests.
Instead of hiding the battery behind an invisible adhesive prison, this Dream Phone embraces a utilitarian philosophy: the battery is labeled, accessible, and proudly displayed. It reads like an engineering part from a drone or an EV—a nod to modularity and long-term usability.
A key visual detail: the 5500mAh capacity Li-ion battery is detachable, likely replaceable, and bordered by a blue tag resembling a pull tab—one that Zack would appreciate for ease of disassembly. It’s not just about tech—it’s about user respect.
In classic JerryRigEverything fashion, this phone doesn’t try to be pretty in the conventional sense—it’s built to be dissected, evaluated, and—if it survives—respected. Even the antenna bands and component routes are purposefully highlighted in different tones, turning technical necessity into visual grammar.
Much like a clear mechanical keyboard or a skeleton watch, this design leans into its transparency not for flair, but for education and appreciation. It’s a celebration of what makes phones tick, a direct nod to Jerry’s audience of tinkerers, repair advocates, and teardown enthusiasts.
via Yankodesign / Tektura Studio





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