Performance (Good) |
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Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 |
Octa core (2.45 GHz, Quad Core + 1.9 GHz, Quad core) |
6 GB RAM |
Display (Very Good) |
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5.5 inches (13.97 cm); Optic AMOLED |
1080x1920 px (FULL HD) |
Gorilla Glass 5 Protection |
Rear Camera (Very Good) Compare Photos |
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Dual Camera Setup
|
Dual LED Flash |
4k @30fps Video Recording |
Front Camera (Very Good) |
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16 MP |
Screen flash |
Full HD @30 fps Video Recording |
Battery (Good) |
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3300 mAh |
Dash Charging; USB Type-C port |
General |
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SIM1: Nano, SIM2: Nano |
5G Not Supported in India |
64 GB internal storage, Non Expandable |
Something Went Wrong!
{{/result}}So here’s the thing – the OnePlus 5 is a great phone. It’s got beastly performance, good cameras and long battery life, and gives you everything you’d expect from a flagship. Unfortunately, OnePlus seems to have forgotten its own mantra of never settling. When the company started out, its goal was creating innovative smartphones at affordable prices. The OnePlus 5 is in fact the opposite - it borrows heavily from other successful smartphones, and while the price
So here’s the thing – the OnePlus 5 is a great phone. It’s got beastly performance, good cameras and long battery life, and gives you everything you’d expect from a flagship. Unfortunately, OnePlus seems to have forgotten its own mantra of never settling. When the company started out, its goal was creating innovative smartphones at affordable prices. The OnePlus 5 is in fact the opposite - it borrows heavily from other successful smartphones, and while the price
awesome
Processor | Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 MSM8998 |
RAM | 6 GB |
Display | 5.5", 1080 x 1920 Resolution |
Rear Camera | 16 MP + 20 MP |
Front Camera | 16 MP |
Battery | 3300 mAh |