Everyone loves a nostalgia trip once in a while and the Nokia 105 and Nokia 301 are here to take you on your latest one.
Feature phones have quietly slipped out of the limelight in recent years as smartphones have become the driving mobile force, but Nokia reckons Europe still pines for the old school style.
The Nokia 105 should be in various European markets by the end of March, while the Nokia 301 is set to touch down in the second quarter of the year - although there's no word on UK availability just yet.
What the handsets lack in features they make up for in price and battery life, with the 105 setting you back just €15 (around £13) and the 301 coming in at €65 (around £56).
Both handsets will apparently last a month on one charge with the Finnish firm claiming the 105 is good for up to 35 days, while the 301 is apparently able to keep going for up to 39 days on standby.

What year is it?

The 105 sports a postage stamp sized, 1.45-inch colour display, FM radio, built in flashlight and the generic phone call and text messaging options.
You get a little more on the 301 with a rear facing 3.2MP camera, slightly larger but still poor resolution 2.4-inch colour screen, HD voice support for better quality calls and a web browser allowing you to harness the power of 3G (3.5G actually), all be it rather slowly thanks to the lowly feature phone processor.
There's a microSD slot on the side of the 301 and it will be available in both single- and dual-SIM flavours.
These handsets probably won't show up on most consumer's radars in Europe, but if you're looking for a dirt cheap handset which will last you all month then the Nokia 105 or 301 could well be the back up phone you've always dreamed of.