OnePlus 5- The Flagship Killer



Its a beast with modest price.


Pros:
  • Excellent Performance
  • Good Battery Life
  • Dual Camera works very well
  • The price!

Cons:
  • Design is starting to feel generic
  • Still no expandable memory 


Hardware and design


  • Snapdragon 835 chipsets
  • 3,300mAh batteries

Display and sound


This year, we're working with another 5.5-inch AMOLED panel running at 1080p, with a traditional 16:9 aspect ratio and no curves.

 There's still a single grille drilled into the phone's bottom edge, and it's a little louder than the 3T at maximum volume. The sound is clear.

Software


As always, the OnePlus 5 runs a custom version of Android called OxygenOS (version 4.5 now).

Camera

Most of the time you'll be using the 16-megapixel main camera, which stacks up well against devices like Samsung's Galaxy S8.
Having another, separate 20-megapixel telephoto camera to switch into is very helpful, and it's a pleasant surprise to see OnePlus use a higher-resolution sensor for the zoom camera.

Performance and battery life
OnePlus 5 effortlessly seemed to handle everything I threw at it. Based on my experience and the big, big numbers the phone put up in suite of synthetic benchmarks, I have no doubt that this more expensive version of the OnePlus 5 will be overkill for most people.

ONEPLUS 5GALAXY S8 PLUSLG G6GOOGLE PIXEL XLONEPLUS 3T
AndEBench Pro17,45616,06410,32216,16414,399
3DMark IS Unlimited40,08135,62630,34629,36031,691
GFXBench 1080p Manhattan Offscreen (fps)6055424850
CF-Bench78,93564,44129,74839,91851,262




Wrap Up

The company built a phone that's very, very hard to dislike. It's blazingly fast, has a surprisingly good camera and excellent battery life. Its version of Android is surprisingly clean, and the price tag means true flagship power won't destroy your wallet.

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