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We live our lives at arm's length - more specifically, at phone-length. Our smartphones are there when we check the time, read the news, ignore an urgent message, doomscroll during a meeting, and tenderly photograph our breakfast. It’s not exactly romantic, but it is real. So perhaps it makes sense…We live our lives at arm's length - more specifically, at phone-length. Our smartphones are there when we check the…
Ends: 1+ month
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Ends: 18th Jul 2025
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We live our lives at arm's length - more specifically, at phone-length. Our smartphones are there when we check the time, read the news, ignore an urgent message, doomscroll during a meeting, and tenderly photograph our breakfast. It’s not exactly romantic, but it is real. So perhaps it makes sense that a company like PopSockets now exists purely to make it easier - and marginally more stylish - to hold onto the rectangular slab of glass that delivers all of that. Whether that’s by grip, wallet, strap or case, the company offers a sort of affectionate hug for your phone. And occasionally, for your aesthetic.
The pitch here is straightforward: PopSockets is the enthusiast’s solution to phone-based ergonomics. This is not a brand chasing world domination or hard specs - it’s selling MagSafe-compatible discs and magnetic plastic accessories, many priced around £35, that click satisfyingly into place. The aim isn't to radically disrupt your mobile experience. It’s to make holding a phone suck just a bit less.
Some of these accessories are more helpful than they look. The MagSafe PopGrip (£34.99) is a particular standout, and by standout, we mean it literally sticks out of the back of your iPhone in a way that's not always helpful when slipping it into a jeans pocket. Still, the grip is solid, admirably sturdy, and manages to avoid feeling cheap - a fate that often befalls similar aftermarket alternatives that advertise at 2 a.m. on social media. It twists off easily, thanks to the MagSafe magnet, and holds surprisingly firm when attached. One-handed texting no longer feels like an exercise in joint hypermobility.
Whether the aesthetic justifies the price is a murkier matter. Designs range from understated (Clear, £29.99) to enthusiastically whimsical (a new Enamel Sylveon Wink PopGrip, also £34.99, for the Pokémon-curious), with plenty calling to specific cultural references - the sunset-washed "Ranch Life" case practically insists you develop a yeehaw personality to match. Taste, even in magnets, remains subjective.
If grips are the functional entry point, the PopSockets ecosystem gets more ambitious higher up the food chain. The PopWallet+ (£24.99) and MagSafe PopWallets (£29.99) aim to consolidate your essentials - cards, ID, maybe a few notes if you still use cash - into an elegant magnetic bundle. They work well in theory, though the capacity maxes out at three cards before things start feeling forced. The wallets cling to your phone with what feels like appropriate dignity, but as with all MagSafe accessories, dropping your phone from waist height onto cobblestones is still ill-advised.
Cases, like the MagSafe-compatible ones for iPhone 15 and beyond (expectedly priced around £44.99), are built solid and packaged prettier than most. They won't drastically outperform any of the better third-party hybrid cases, like those from Spigen or Mous, but they integrate seamlessly with PopSockets grips, which is the real point. You’re not here for a tank-like drop shell. You’re here because you want to carry your phone like a fashion accessory with cleverly modular parts.
You can, of course, create your own PopGrip or case. The "Create Your Own" tool lets you upload images and tweak designs, though with some restrictions - no copyrighted materials, for example, so your dream of a Taylor-Swift-meets-Darth-Vader hybrid grip will likely remain unrealised. It’s user-friendly enough, but the novelty wears off after a while. Not everything needs to be custom. Sometimes, vanilla is fine.
Shipping is free on orders over £50, which is good news because most single items land just under that threshold. (Two items? Suddenly liberated from shipping fees.) Expect 3–6 working days for delivery within the UK, though your mileage may vary depending on vague logistical things usually beyond your control. Returns are accepted within 30 days of delivery, provided the product is unused - not unreasonable given these are accessories, not heirlooms.
As for discounts, PopSockets currently offers 15% off your next purchase if you surrender your email address to the newsletter gods. Sales and bundles occasionally pop up, but this isn’t a site running daily flash deals or chaotic overstock blowouts. It’s calmer than that. Like a lifestyle brand that doesn’t want to yell.
At worst, PopSockets products will modestly accessorise your phone and subtract a trace of ergonomic irritation from your daily scroll. At best, they’ll let you express something about your personality - florals, glitter, Pokémon, desert sunsets - while adding just enough function to make you feel clever about using them. Are they necessary? Not really. Are they absurd? Occasionally. But like a surprisingly supportive pair of trainers or a high-quality umbrella, these are tools that get easier to appreciate once you start using them.
Besides, your phone’s going with you wherever you go. It might as well feel like it wants to stay put.
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⭐ Rating: 4.2 / 5 (35 votes)