Clicks built its reputation on something modern smartphones quietly made harder: typing. At CES 2026, the company is doubling down with two new releases that feel like a smart, modern nod to the BlackBerry era, but without the nostalgia trap. The headline products are the Clicks Communicator, its first smartphone, and the Clicks Power Keyboard, a pocket keyboard that also works as a battery.
This is not about bringing back “retro.” It is about bringing back control.

Image Credits: Gizmodo
The Communicator is Clicks’ attempt to make a phone that prioritizes communication over consumption. Think of it as a device designed for messaging, email, notes, and getting things done, not endless scrolling.

Image Credits: ZDNET
It is hard not to think of BlackBerry when you see it, but the vibe here is more “BlackBerry energy” than “BlackBerry remake.” The goal is speed and confidence, the feeling that you can answer people quickly and move on.
Clicks is leaning into physical controls and practical features that many phones left behind:
On paper, it is also aiming to feel current, not compromised: modern Android, a high refresh display, a solid battery, and camera specs that are more than “good enough” for daily life.
Who should skip it:
The Power Keyboard is the more universal idea. It is a slide out Bluetooth keyboard that snaps on magnetically to compatible phones and can also top up your battery. In other words, it turns your existing phone into a keyboard phone when you want it, and it earns its place in your bag by also being a power backup.

Image Credits: ZDNET
Most phone keyboards fail because they are one thing only. The Power Keyboard is trying to be two useful things at once:
If it feels sturdy and comfortable in the hand, this could be the sleeper hit of the two launches, simply because it works with more people’s current setups.
The idea is strong. CES is where the experience has to match it.
For Communicator:
For Power Keyboard:
Clicks is doing something rare in consumer tech: it is not trying to win with a bigger screen or louder specs. It is trying to win with input, focus, and tactile satisfaction.
If BlackBerry was about email in your pocket, Clicks is about modern messaging on your terms. The big question CES 2026 will answer is simple: do the keys feel as good as the idea?
I’m a tech-savvy marketing strategist who’s always exploring how products fit into real-world behavior and market trends. Leveraging my professional experience in marketing, I evaluate gadgets from strategic and user-focused perspectives. At The Gadget Flow, I analyze features, benefits, and market impact to give readers a deeper understanding of the latest tech.