Chinese company Meizu has unveiled its new range of smartphones, the 15 series, and it seems to be taking a stand against current trends in phone design. You won’t find notches or even tall screens here — just large, intact rectangles. It’s actually kind of refreshing.

There are three phones: the 5.95-inch 1440p OLED Meizu 15 Plus, the 5.46-inch 1080p OLED Meizu 15, and the 5.46-inch 1080p LCD Meizu 15 Lite. The Plus uses a Samsung Exynos 8895 processor, unusually — which is the same chip found in international models of the Galaxy S8 — while the 15 has a Snapdragon 660 and the Lite employs a Snapdragon 626.

Design-wise, imagine an iPhone 7 Plus with thinner bezels on all four sides and you’re pretty much there. The phones even manage to fit a circular fingerprint reader-equipped home button below the screen. Meizu is also touting a linear vibration motor to work with this button and other features throughout the Flyme 7 software, something desperately lacking in most Android phones.

Meet the Meizu 15 in black and blue. pic.twitter.com/yB0kBaXqeA — Ard Boudeling (@ArdCB) April 22, 2018

The two OLED models have a dual 20-megapixel and 12-megapixel rear camera setup, while all three have 20-megapixel selfie cameras. The Lite and the 15 have 4GB of RAM and 3,000mAh batteries, while the Plus is upgraded to 6GB and 3,500mAh. All the phones have headphone jacks.

Overall, the 15 series looks like a pretty solid lineup if you’ve been less than enamored with the way phone design has been going of late. The Plus will sell from 3,000 yuan (about $475) in China, the 15 will sell for 2,500 yuan (~$400), and the Lite will cost 1,700 yuan (~270).