One of the coolest Android handsets ever will finally launch soon

One of the coolest Android handsets ever will finally launch soon

Unveiled initially at MWC 2014 in February, the YotaPhone 2 is not available in stores yet, though the handset appears to have plenty of potential. The successor of the original YotaPhone, the YotaPhone 2 is supposed to offer users access to two touchscreen displays and high-end specs, with Android Central reporting the company has scheduled a special December 3rd event to launch the handset.

FROM EARLIER: The iPhone 6 might be low-res, but Apple’s highest-resolution device ever is coming soon

The company posted a teaser image of the dual-screen YotaPhone 2 on Twitter, alongside a short confirmation the phone will be unveiled (again) soon. “#YotaPhone2 will be presented December 3! We will celebrate with a by-invitation only event in London – stay tuned,” the company said.

The main attraction of the handset is the secondary E Ink display, which will offer users up to 50 hours of battery life. But the YotaPhone 2 should have specs on par with most flagship Android handsets as well.

Back at MWC, Yota revealed that the phone will pack a 5-inch Full HD main display, a 4.7-inch qHD E Ink display, Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processor, 2GB of RAM, 32GB of storage, 8-megapixel camera, wireless charging, NFC, 2,550 mAh battery and the latest version of Android.

The company also said at the mobile event in Barcelona, Spain that the YotaPhone 2 will be available initially in EMEA markets and Russia, with a launch projected for the fourth quarter of the year. With that in mind, Yota will almost certainly announce pricing details and actual launch dates for this interesting Android handset during its event next month.

More from BGR: Massive 47-page ad shows all of Best Buy’s crazy Black Friday deals

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Related stories

This is easily the coolest thing to emerge from MWC

New dual-screen Android phone set to make a splash at MWC 2014

The funniest thing you'll see today: Porn stars explain net neutrality