In a move that could transform how we use mobile phones, Chinese tech powerhouses ByteDance (maker of TikTok) and ZTE have unveiled what they’re calling the first truly “agentic” AI smartphone: the Nubia M153. Priced at just 3,499 yuan (~US $495), the M153 isn’t just a phone — it’s a full-blown digital assistant that can act on your behalf.
At its heart is ByteDance’s AI engine, Doubao — a large language model fused with the operating system for deep integration. Unlike conventional assistants (think Siri or Google Assistant), Doubao doesn’t ask “which app?” It watches your screen, recognizes the user interface, and navigates the phone like a human — opening apps, tapping, typing, filling out forms, and even making payments.
In early demos shared online by entrepreneur “Taylor Ogan,” the phone carried out complex tasks at voice command alone — from booking a hotel (including checking pet policy) to ordering food, hailing a robot taxi and changing the drop-off point mid-ride.
Under the hood: a Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset, 16 GB RAM, a 6.78-inch LTPO display, and a triple-camera setup. The M153 comes in a 16 GB + 512 GB configuration.
This isn’t just incremental smartphone evolution — it’s a leap. The M153 doesn’t wait for users to follow a script; instead, it figures out the work for you. Want a dinner reservation, a ride, shopping done — you just tell it, and it figures out how. For companies like Samsung and Apple that are pushing smart features, this could shake up their dominance. The question becomes: can they match a phone that “thinks and acts” for its user?
But it’s not all smooth sailing. Within days of launch, several major Chinese super-apps — including payment, banking, and messaging platforms — moved to block or restrict Doubao’s agentic features, citing “security and fairness” concerns. As a result, ByteDance reportedly scaled back certain capabilities of the AI on the M153 (especially around financial and gaming apps).
Still, the initial batch was snapped up almost immediately — and resale prices on second-hand marketplaces have already shot up as high as 4,999 yuan (~US $706).
The M153 may be a prototype, but it signals a new paradigm — phones that don’t just respond to commands, but act like personal agents.
The battle is shifting from raw hardware (processors, screens) to who controls the intelligence layer — the operating system, the AI agent, the integrations.
Expect competition. If Apple and Samsung want to stay ahead, they may need to evolve from “smartphones” to “smart agents.”
But the pushback from app makers highlights a major hurdle: platform compatibility, security, and user control. As this tech spreads, regulation and standards will likely emerge.
The Nubia M153 — cheap by flagship standards, yet powerful in ambition — is a bold bet on a future where phones become borderline robotic assistants. It may be early, and the backlash from established apps may slow it down. But the message is loud and clear: the age of voice-triggered shortcuts is ending. The age of phones that think and act for you may just be beginning.








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