Solana Mobile Begins Global Shipment Of Its Crypto Smartphone With 150,000 Orders In The Bag
Tens of thousands of Seeker smartphones are now on their way to users in over 50 countries, as Solana Mobile begins delivery of its second-generation crypto device.
With more than 150,000 pre-orders already secured, the Seeker is quickly outpacing its predecessor, the Saga, which sold only 20,000 units.
Priced at $450 and $500, the Seeker is forecast to generate at least $67.5 million in gross revenue for Solana Mobile, a subsidiary of Solana Labs.
The device is aimed squarely at developers and crypto enthusiasts—two groups that have often clashed with dominant app store operators over fees and restrictions.
Decentralised App Store And Seed Vault Offer Web3-Ready Features
Unlike traditional smartphones, the Seeker is built with blockchain integration at its core.
Its most talked-about feature is the Seed Vault, a hardware-secure environment that keeps private keys and seed phrases separate from the application layer.
This allows users to interact with apps securely without ever exposing their sensitive credentials.
Alongside this, the phone includes a decentralised app store that avoids the limitations and commissions imposed by Google and Apple.
Solana Mobile says the store is designed to bypass what it calls the “cryptophobic censorship” seen in mainstream platforms.
TEEPIN Architecture Reinvents Trust And Security In Mobile Devices
One of the more technical innovations behind the Seeker is its three-layer infrastructure called TEEPIN, short for Trusted Execution Environment Platform Infrastructure Network.
It links hardware, verified software, users, and a network of “Guardians” to create a decentralised trust system.
Solana Mobile general manager Emmett Hollyer explained,
“The device can prove to the network that it’s running legitimate software.”
This is made possible through the TEEPIN architecture, which uses advanced cryptographic attestation.
By decentralising aspects of device access, app distribution and software verification, Solana Mobile positions itself as a challenger to the traditional mobile model, where users and developers depend on central authorities for software approval and security.
Apple And Google Face Mounting Pressure Over App Store Rules
The launch of the Seeker coincides with a shift in the app store landscape.
A recent court ruling involving Epic Games and Apple has allowed developers to link to external payment systems and NFT collections without paying extra fees, an outcome widely viewed as a boost for crypto developers.
Apple had faced criticism for preventing developers from directing users to alternative platforms and charging commissions on in-app purchases.
Meanwhile, Google Play has also restricted access to unregistered crypto exchanges in certain regions, including South Korea.
Solana Mobile’s decentralised marketplace aims to sidestep such controls entirely, offering developers an alternative path without the platform gatekeeping.
Can Solana Break Into The Mainstream Smartphone Market?
The Seeker is not just an upgrade but a statement about how mobile experiences in Web3 should function.
But whether it will make its way into mainstream phone retailers worldwide depends on how demand continues to grow beyond early adopters.
While the strong early demand signals interest, there is still a long road ahead in competing with the global dominance of Apple and Android.
Still, Solana Mobile’s pivot into hardware with crypto-first features and decentralised app access marks a bold play in a mobile market where few have ventured beyond traditional models.
As Hollyer puts it,
“What really sets Seeker apart is its onchain features.”