In these credit-crunched times, not everyone is looking out for the latest do-everything mobile. A functional, straight-down-the-line phone that's easy on the wallet is no bad thing. And if it's easy on the eye, too, that's even better.

At the budget end of its own-brand phone range, Vodafone has been getting busy, with several new models announced at Mobile World Congress. These include a Catwalk Collection makeover for its value 533 sliderphone. Produced by French mobile maker Sagem, the revamped Vodafone 533 ditches drabness for a selection of bright and breezy colours, including gold, candy (pink), ice (white), violet, and petrol (blue).

Cheap and cheerful is the order of the day. The 533 is pitched at a recession-dodging £30 on Vodafone pre-pay. At that basement price, the features list is unsurprisingly modest – it's a tri-band GSM handset, without 3G connectivity, but it does have a 1.3-megapixel camera with video shooting option, a music player, FM radio, and MicroSD memory card support.

Design

Vodafone offers good value on the design front for the budget-squeezed. The 533 has a serviceable, curved edge sliderphone construction that feels solid enough in-hand. Its casing is plastic and it has a one-piece slider numberpad, but it feels smooth and the control panel around the navigation D-pad is tidily designed, with bits of chrome trim worked in.

The Catwalk Collection may not be destined for supermodel handbags, but we can see the eye-catching paintjobs appealing particularly to younger cash-strapped mobile buyers. On the back too, a bit of individual patterning prettifies them further.

The phone measures a pocket-friendly 97(h) x 46(w) x 13.7(d)mm, weighing a reasonable 90g. Its display is a 2-inch 256k-colour, 176x220 pixels TFT, a bright screen, which is fine for this class of handset. The user interface is fairly conventional stuff, based initially around a grid of main menu option icons, and subsequent tabbed sub-menu lists as you drill in to the options. The graphics aren't the most sophisticated, but they do the job, and the user interface is mostly no-nonsense and straightforward to operate. The D-pad offers the usual type of shortcut options, and there's a typical softkey link to the Vodafone live! content portal.

The basic controls are easy to operate although it can feel a tad pedestrian tapping your way through the menus. The one-piece keypad, which has numbers separated by ridges, is adequate for reasonable-paced texting.

Features

With just 8MB of internal memory, you'll need to spend a little on a MicroSD card if you want to give it a go as a music player. The MicroSD card slot is accessible under the back cover, though there's no need to remove the battery or power down to swap it. The music player interface is easy enough to use without being particularly sophisticated.

The sound quality is actually surprisingly decent for a budget handset; it comes supplied with a set of earphones that portray more depth and range than we'd expect at this price point. The limitations of the music player interface mean it won't be an MP3 player replacement any time soon, but it sounds fine if you want to carry a bundle of tunes around to listen to on your phone.

Unsurprisingly, there's no standard 3.5mm headphone socket to upgrade ear wear – but that's unlikely to put off this phone's target buyer.

As well as the music player, an FM radio is included, offering another straightforward audio entertainment option. Like the music player, this can be played through the loud speaker, if you're not fussed about sound quality.