Commodore has slashed the starting price of its Callback 8020 flip phone to $399, down from $499, by switching to recycled “post-consumer” memory chips and making the previously bundled earphones optional. The company announced the tiered pricing just six days before pre-orders open on June 30th, and attributed the original $499 figure in part to the global memory shortage that has pushed DRAM prices to record highs. Buyers who want factory-fresh memory can still pay to upgrade, but four of the five colorways now qualify for the $399 price, with the gold Founders Edition holding at its original cost.When pre-orders open, the Callback will default to "post consumer" memory that Commodore describes as rigorously stress-tested and covered by the same one-year warranty as new chips, with premium memory available as a paid upgrade at checkout. The custom FiiO in-ear monitors that were previously set to be included in every box will now be sold as a separate add-on.BASIC Beige, ProtoPET White, and SX Silver drop to $399 from $499, and the translucent Starlight Edition drops to $399 from $549, a $150 cut. The 24-karat-gold Founders Edition keeps its price, which Commodore tied to the gold plating and extra bundled items. Registering for a launch-day code takes an additional $50 off on June 30th only, bringing most models to $349 that day.The Callback 8020 carries 4 GB of memory paired with a MediaTek Helio G81, a modest configuration by smartphone standards, but mobile memory hasn’t escaped the price surge gripping the wider market. Memory contract prices rose by 90% to 95% in the first quarter of 2026, after Samsung, SK hynix, and Micron shifted production toward high-bandwidth memory for AI accelerators, leaving less capacity for consumer parts.That squeeze has already pushed vendors to restart DDR4 lines and prompted IDC to forecast PC price rises of up to 8% this year, while the price of DDR2, of all things, has risen by 60%. Memory can account for 15% to 20% of a mid-range phone's bill of materials, and budget Android makers lack the long-term supply contracts that shield the likes of Apple and Samsung from the worst of the increases.Pre-orders open June 30th on Commodore's site, with buyers charged upfront to fund manufacturing. Commodore says shipping starts this winter and that pre-orders will be delivered within six months. However, it notes delivery is contingent on the device passing FCC equipment authorization, which it hasn’t yet completed.