OnePlus 8 Pro: Be It a Samsung Killer?

Rizwan@Tech4life
11 min readJun 15, 2020

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The 75% of OnePlus 8 Pro is the same as the other OnePlus 8 Models. However, the left behind 25 percent is what makes him special than any other OnePlus 8 phones.

OUR VERDICT
The OnePlus 8 Pro is a great premium phone to be sure, but this phone is a very good worth when you place it up against its closest opponents, particularly those that are 5G capable.

The OnePlus 8 Pro costs $300 less than the Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus and yet it has a larger display, a 120Hz mode that doesn’t force you to pick between a fast refresh rate and the highest resolution and extensive battery life. In addition, the OnePlus 8 Pro bargains the fastest wireless charging around. The Galaxy S20 Plus has a more authoritative hybrid zoom and accessible from all the major carriers instead of just unlocked.

The OnePlus 8 Pro’s cameras are not the best in its class, and I wish OnePlus go with a flat display rather a curved one, but in total, the OnePlus 8 Pro is simply one of the best Android phones you can purchase if you want a first-class phone without the $1,000+ label shudder from Samsung or Apple.
LOVE FOR
+ Crystal Bright 120Hz Display
+ SuperFast Wireless Charging
+ Long Battery Life
+ Good Quad Cameras

HATE FOR
- No External Storage
- Big Rear Camera Bump
- Curve Display Cause unintentional Tap

The OnePlus 8 Pro appears to be costly for an OnePlus telephone, yet it’s really a superior incentive than similar leaders from Samsung and Apple. Beginning at $899, you get premium craftsmanship, and eye-popping 6.78-inch show (with 120Hz invigorate rate) quad cameras and 5G ability. The OnePlus 8 Pro additionally offers remote charging — at last! — and it’s the quickest remote charging we’ve at any point tried.

Overall, the Pro is a great value; it’s so good that we’ve added this handset to our best phones list. This flagship even beats Samsung’s closest competitor in our head-to-head OnePlus 8 Pro vs Galaxy S20 Plus face-off, costing $300 less. You are getting a lot of phone for your money here.

OnePlus 8 Pro price and release date
The OnePlus 8 Pro has a release date of April 29, with a opening price of $899/£799 which includes 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage. If you want 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage, you have to pay $999/£899.

OnePlus 8 Pro are available in 8GB/128GB and 12GB/256GB configurations in Glacial Green and Onyx Black, but the Ultramarine Blue model only comes in 12GB/256GB.

In the U.S., you will get this phone through Amazon as well as through OnePlus itself.

OnePlus 8 Pro review: Design and colours

Samsung should learn a bit from the One Plus 8 Pro’s design. It’s beautiful without being a fingerprint magnet. The OnePlus 8 Pro uses matte-frosted glass using a new crafting technique. In this technique, the surface is smooth to the touch but not slippery, and there’s an observable luster to the back of the phone that changes shades reliant on how ambient light strike on it.

There is a more worthy update. The One Plus 8 Pro is IP68 rated, which makes this the first OnePlus phone to have that level of water resistance. That means the phone can live, even after being submerged in 1.5 meters (5 feet) of water for 30 minutes.

I do have some complaints about the OnePlus 8 Pro’s design. The first is that the curved screen is too curvvy. On several times I pressed something I didn’t mean to; And on other instances, it feels that the OnePlus 8 Pro wasn’t actioning my taps, but then I found that my other hand was touching the screen.

Another issue which I feel is that the rear vertical camera bump overhangs more from the rear of the OnePlus 8 Pro than the camera spots do on the Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus and iPhone 11 Pro Max.

The good part is that the One Plus 8 Pro is equally sleek given its large 6.78-inch display. It measures 6.5 x 2.9 x 0.33 inches and weighs 7 ounces, related to 6.37 x 2.9 x 0.3 inches and 6.56 ounces for the Galaxy S20 Plus. Therefore, the OnePlus 8 Pro is larger and bigger than the S20 Plus, but that’s logical given that the Samsung has a smaller 6.7-inch screen. The OnePlus 8 Pro is also lighter than the 7.26-ounce OnePlus 7 Pro, mostly because OnePlus ditched the pop-up selfie camera.

OnePlus 8 Pro review: Display

The One Plus 8 Pro got one of the best displays, you not only get a super smooth 120Hz refresh rate like Samsung’s flagship phones, but OnePlus 8 Pro also gives you this level even at its max 2K resolution. With galaxy S20 , you have to pull-down to 1080p resolution if you want the greater 120Hz rate.

So, in what way, does the One Plus 8 Pro screen look? Stunning. The OnePlus 8 Pro’s picture looks so buttery smooth, and it’s all due to what’s called MEMC, a dedicated chip delivers videos on Netflix and YouTube from 24 fps up to 120 fps. Amazon videos up to 60 fps. Another plus point is the HDR boosting feature that improvises every frame, which effects in deeper blacks and snowier whites. I did notice that faces were brighter even in darker areas when watching the Fast & Furious trailer on this OnePlus 8 Pro and compared to the Galaxy S20.

The One Plus 8 Pro is graded for 1,300 nits of brightness, and it was just as bright outside as the iPhone 11 Pro and Galaxy S20 when viewing. The OnePlus 8 Pro’s display also did very well in our lab tests. The panel recorded 165% of the sRGB color gamut and 116.9% in the extra hard DCI-P3 gamut. In evaluation, the Galaxy S20 Plus success a higher 224% on sRGB and 163.4 on DCI-P3. I did notice more saturated hues on the S20 when watching the same scene on both phones when both displays fixed to vivid mode.

The OnePlus 8 Pro demonstrates more precise colors than the Galaxy S20 Plus on the Delta-E test, which measures color accurateness, the OnePlus 8 Pro recorded 0.26, while 0.36 for the Galaxy S20 Plus. A mark of 0 is perfect, so lower marks are better. The OnePlus 8 Pro even beat out the iPhone 11 Pro Max’s score of 0.28.

OnePlus 8 Pro review: Cameras

The OnePlus 8 Pro is an extraordinarily proficient camera phone and grasps its own with the best camera phones in some setups. Though the low-light results were predominantly impressive, the OnePlus 8 Pro struggled a bit with portraits and close-ups.

The OnePlus 8 Pro got four rear cameras, which includes a 48-megapixel main camera with an f/1.78 aperture to allow you to shoot at 48MP or 12MP. The 48MP mode is best for when you have a lot of ambient light. There is also a 8MP telephoto camera with a 3x optical zoom, and ultra-wide 48MP camera with a 119-degree field of view and a committed 5MP color filter camera that enables you to apply artistic filters when you’re shooting.

When compared to Galaxy S20 the S20 delivers more vibrant colors, especially in the grass, and it’s a warmer photo overall, but the OnePlus 8 Pro’s shot offers more true-to-life colors and more detail when you zoom in.

The OnePlus 8 Pro chop down a bit against the iPhone 11 Pro Max in this portrait comparison. While the bokeh effect is convincing with the blurred flowering tree in the background, the overall image is hazier than the iPhone 11 Pro’s shot. You can also make out a lot more detail in iPhone 11 Pro portraits. Another downer: you cannot regulate the level of blur just as you can do on the Galaxy S20.

Considering the 3x optical zoom on the OnePlus 8 Pro, Samsung has a slight edge; the “Go Freehold” text is simpler to peruse, and the orange, purple, pink, and blue in the work of art are more lively than on the OnePlus 8 Pro. All things considered, the details are sharp in both photographs.

What about close-ups? The OnePlus 8 Pro battled in this shot of blossoms. The focal point of the casing is in the center, however, the encompassing blossoms get obscured in with the remainder of the tree. Then, the Galaxy S20’s given conveys a more brilliant white in the blossoms and more detail in the petals.

OnePlus 8 Pro review: Performance

There’s amply of power inside the case of the OnePlus 8 Pro, with the phone containing Qualcomm’s first-rate Snapdragon 865 chipset, which comes with Qualcomm’s X55 5G modem to allow super-fast internet speeds, where 5G is existing.

This is matching with either 8GB or 12GB of LPDDR5 RAM (depending on you: option to choose from 128GB or 256GB of internal storage), which confirms that the OnePlus 8 Pro can handle everything you toss to it.

The LPDDR5 RAM is 30% quicker and eats 20% less power than the RAM set up in the OnePlus 7T series, which styles it an additional comfortable upgrade in the 8 Pro.

The OnePlus 8 Pro (with 12GB of RAM) logged an average multi-core benchmark score of 3305 on Geekbench 5.1, which places it easily over the OnePlus 7T Pro’s average of 2564 and moreover It is able to beat the Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus, who scored 3,034.

This clearly states that OnePlus 8 Pro is an extremely powerful device and one which should be appropriately future-ready in terms of power and connectivity, thanks to its 5G capabilities.

Editor’s note: We couldn’t test the 8 Pro’s 5G abilities as we don’t live in a territory that approaches the 5G to arrange, and due to the coronavirus lockdown, we couldn’t make a trip to a 5G region.

The dual-SIM tray permits you to ride on to two SIM cards at the same time in OnePlus 8 Pro, though only one SIM card will be capable to use 5G at a time. However, while there is provision for two SIM cards, OnePlus continues to avoid expandable storage, sense that, you have to do the things with the stock amount.

Considering the unit of 12GB+256GB configuration, the system took up around 20GB of space, which means that you’ll have about 236GB of working storage, and near about 108GB in the 128GB model. If you stuck in “running out of space”, you can use cloud storage as well, for example, Google Photos, which permits you to upload all of your photos and videos to the cloud for free.

With all that power under the hood, and a 120Hz screen, it’s no wonder that Android 10 is quick and smooth under the thumb. As we might expect, OnePlus has uses its Oxygen OS interface, although for the maximum portion it keeps stuff relatively stock Android.

OnePlus 8 Pro has a speaker on its bottom edge and a second speaker at the top, overhead the display, for stereo sound. These speakers have been boosted with Dolby Atmos technology, providing richer, deeper sound.

The OnePlus 8 Pro is surely capable of room-filling sound, and you can restfully listen to music or watch a video with the volume up high without much in the way of distortion. Still, pairing the handset with a speaker or a set of headphones will provide better audio quality.

The OnePlus 8 Pro is packed with Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.1 support, so if you have a router or equipment which support these technologies you’ll be gifted to take benefit of faster internet speeds and more power-efficient Bluetooth connections.

OnePlus 8 Pro review: Battery life

OnePlus says it’s done a lot of optimization work to safeguard battery life at maximum resolution and refresh rate — and based on our time with this phone, it seems that this has paid bonuses. Battery drains at QHD+ and 120Hz is marginally faster than at the lower-resolution setting, but the change is nominal from our experience of gaming and watching video.

The OnePlus 8 Pro has a 4,510 mAh battery, which is a little higher than the 4,500 mAh battery in the Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus. And this phone delivered impressive endurance in our battery test, which involved continuous web surfing on 150 nits of screen brightness. The OnePlus 8 Pro lasted an excellent 11 hours and 5 minutes with the display set to 60 Hz. This runtime beats the Galaxy S20 Plus by around a half-hour, as Samsung’s phone continued to 10:31.

OnePlus 8 Pro fast charging and wireless charging

The OnePlus 8 Pro is not just the initial OnePlus phone to offer wireless charging and reverse wireless charging. It’s legitimately the fastest wireless charging phone in the world.

Thanks to a exceptional Warp Charge 30 Wireless charger, available for $65, you can get the OnePlus 8 Pro faster than any typical Qi wireless charger for iPhones or Android phones. For example, Samsung’s fast wireless charger for the Galaxy S20 charges at 15 watts; the Warp Charge 30 wireless doubles that power.

In our testing, the OnePlus 8 Pro charged to 55 percent in just 30 minutes, to prevent overheating, the Warp Charge 30 wireless has its own built-in fan; you can hear it, but it’s not annoyingly loud. The only downer is that the wireless charger doesn’t work with the phone in landscape mode, unlike some third-party chargers.

The included wired charger is even quicker, as it took from 0 percent to 60% in 30 minutes and to 33% power in 15 minutes.

OnePlus 8 Pro review: OxygenOS

What Oxygen OS does propose is superfluous customization, with a range of quick gestures which can lift-off the camera, toggle the flashlight, or open an app of your choice. You can also effortlessly tinker with the system’s accent color, icons, font and more from within the settings menu.

There’s also a full dark mode (itemized under ‘Tone’ in the settings), for artistic lovers, and its availability covers to all of OnePlus 8 pre-installed apps, including the dialler, messages, camera, gallery and files.

OnePlus gives you two ways to unlock the OnePlus 8 Pro: an in-screen fingerprint scanner and face unlock. I found the fingerprint scanner is quick, so long as you’re considered with the press. But Face Unlock is even faster on this phone, and I can see most people opting for that first. (Just to keep this notice in your mind that your fingerprint or PIN is more secure), because OnePlus’ 2D Face Unlock isn’t as sophisticated as the 3D facial recognition in the iPhone 11 and Pixel 4.

Check One Plus 8 Website

Originally published at https://www.thetechforlife.com.

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Rizwan@Tech4life
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Hi Friends, Tech for life is a result of my passion for Technology. I love trying new things, & introducing new ideas and enjoyed meeting meeting new peoples.