Made in Germany, designed in Switzerland, and running an operating system built on the same soil — the Punkt. MC03 Sovereign Smartphone is now shipping after wrapping up its pre-order run. It launched at CES back on January 2, 2026, and you can order one today directly from Punkt. for €745 (roughly $849 USD). One catch: it comes in black, and only black.
Let’s get the awkward part out of the way first. For that money, the spec sheet won’t make anyone’s jaw drop — but that’s rather the point. If raw silicon were the selling proposition, all the “Sovereign” branding would be redundant.
Still, the hardware is far from embarrassing. You get a 6.67-inch OLED display at 1080×2436 with a 120Hz refresh rate, driven by a MediaTek Dimensity 7300 paired with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. Around the back sits a 64MP main camera with autofocus, backed by an 8MP fixed-focus ultrawide and a 2MP fixed-focus macro. Selfies come courtesy of a 32MP fixed-focus front camera.
The real headline feature, though, is what happens when things go sideways. Punkt. fitted the MC03 with a 5,200mAh removable battery — a genuine rarity in 2026 — that supports 30W wired and 15W wireless charging. There’s an IP68 waterproof rating, and, most tellingly, a physical kill switch for the camera and microphone. No software toggle, no trust required — a hardware cut that severs the connection outright.
Where the MC03 truly earns its “sovereign” label is the software. It runs AphyOS, a privacy-focused operating system developed in Switzerland and pitched as an alternative to the usual American duopoly. Better still, the AphyOS subscription is included in the purchase price for the lifetime of the device — no recurring fees hanging over your head, no surprise paywall down the road.
That combination is the whole thesis. Punkt. isn’t chasing benchmark supremacy; it’s selling independence — a phone whose supply chain, operating system and privacy architecture are all rooted in Europe rather than borrowed from Silicon Valley or Shenzhen. The removable battery and physical switches reinforce a philosophy of control that mainstream flagships quietly abandoned years ago.
Is €745 a lot for mid-range internals? Absolutely. But the MC03 isn’t really competing on gigahertz and megapixels. It’s a bet that a growing slice of buyers cares more about who controls their data — and their hardware — than about squeezing out a few extra frames per second. For those people, this is a genuinely different proposition, and it’s available right now.