Would you look at that – OnePlus has done it again, introducing the world to another fantastic phone that somehow manages to beat the big-brand competition on specs, but still cost a whole lot less.
The OnePlus 5 is an excellent bit of kit, which improves on last year’s OnePlus 3 in so many ways. But while there’s lots to love here, there are a few things that aren’t so rosy – like that higher price.
We’ve lived with one for a week and here are our favourite bits of the newest mid-range marvel, plus a few we’re not so keen on… and one that we just can’t make up our minds on.
6 THINGS WE LOVE…
1) THE STREAMLINED DESIGN
There are still room for detail, though, like the neat horizon line that stretches around the outer edge and separates the front from the back. You still get old favourites like the alert slider and lightning-fast fingerprint sensor, too. Oh, and a choice of colours: Midnight Black and Slate Grey.
The OnePlus 5 feels every bit the premium phone, with fantastic build quality and a design that easily keeps pace with the rest of the high-end competition.
2) THE DELIGHTFUL DUAL CAMERAS
Even better, it adds a whole host of extra features, like dreamy depth-blur on portraits, a lossless 2x zoom, and a Pro mode that’ll have you shooting stunning snaps in no time. The helping hand from imaging experts DxO clearly paid off – and makes the whole OnePlus 5 package complete.
3) UNPARALLELED PERFORMANCE
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 835 is setting benchmark records all over the place, and with OxygenOS being the most no-nonsense approach to Android you’ll find this side of a Google Pixel, you’d better believe the OnePlus 5 feels phenomenally quick.
Add in a crazy 8GB of RAM on the Midnight Black version, and you’ve got the fastest Android phone you can buy right now. That means apps and games run flawlessly, your home screens respond instantly to your swipes, and you won’t find a hint of lag or slowdown. It’s ace.
4) IT’S A BATTERY LIFE BEAST
You’ll easily go an entire day on a charge, and depending on what you get up to, you’ll still have juice left for the next day. It takes no time at all to top back up, either, thanks to Dash Charge. Plug it in, and in 30 minutes you’ll be back up to around 50% – easily enough for the rest of the day.
This makes it one of the best phones around right now for sheer longevity. It might not match the 5000mAh batteries of the Lenovo P2 or Moto Z2 Play, but just about everything else out there will struggle to match the OnePlus 5 for pure staying power.
5) SIMPLIFIED ANDROID
Essentially cherry-picking the best bits of vanilla Android, and the Pixel launcher that’s still exclusive to Google’s own Pixel devices, the OnePlus 5 is arguably even better than those home-grown versions. You can customise the look with your pick of icon packs, hide all your home screen widgets in a single scrolling Shelf, and access your apps with a swipe.
6) A DELIGHTFUL DISPLAY
It’s an AMOLED panel underneath, too – which means impeccable contrast and bright, vivid colours. Not to mention perfect, inky blacks which make all the difference when you’re watching films or playing games.
Sure, there are plenty of phones with QHD screens, super-skinny bezels and even curved sides, but then they cost a whole lot more moolah. This doesn’t, and that’s just fine.
… 4 THINGS WE DON’T…
1) THE OVERLY FAMILIAR LOOKS
Speaking of iPhones, those dual cameras around back make the OnePlus 5 look an awful lot like an Apple handset. Previous efforts had their own unique design, but this year there’s less to separate it from the rest of the pack. Even if it is very well-made.
2) NO EXPANDABLE STORAGE, AGAIN
Now that other phones have gone with a hybrid SIM setup, with a second SIM card slot also doubling as microSD storage, we had our fingers crossed that the OnePlus 5 would do the same.
Sadly, though, it’s business as usual: you can load up two SIM cards at once, but there’s no space for expandable storage. That 64GB Slate Grey option not enough for you? Then you’ll have to pay extra and grab the 128GB Midnight Black handset instead.
3) WATERPROOFING STILL DOESN’T MAKE THE CUT
Though we’re venturing into the heart of winter now, South Africa’s weather vagaries mean that you could find yourself drenches without warning — especially if you’re living on the coast. With other phones, that’s not a problem, but you’ll have to be a lot more careful with a OnePlus 5 in your palm.
4) LOW-LIGHT CAMERA COULD BE BETTER
Tiny phone camera sensors are never going to be as good as full-size snappers in low light, but handsets like the Google Pixel, Galaxy S8 and iPhone 7 all take superior shots. The LED flash helps, of course, but for the most part, you’ll want to stick to better lit scenes to get the best from those dual lenses.
…AND THE ONE THING WE’RE TORN ON
1) THAT HIGHER PRICE
On the other hand, it’s expensive but not too expensive. Don’t get us wrong, a base rate of R7,500 is a lot of money to drop on a phone – but it’s significantly less than the R15,000 you’ll have to pay for a Galaxy S8 or iPhone 7.
That still makes it great value overall, even if it isn’t in quite the same buy category as last year’s model.