OnePlus Nord CE 5G Review By Digit

By Digit
Aug 15, 2021
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OnePlus Nord CE 5G Review

It's 20 21 and one plus is looking to take its mid-range game up a notch with the launch of the north ce5e, a phone which, according to the company, is built on the core aspects of the OnePlus, not experience but available at a price, that's more accessible than before. Much like the original, not the Nazi is more than just another OnePlus one. In fact, it's an attempt at reaching out to loyal OnePlus fans, the same ones that the company left behind when it first made the move to high end and premium segments of the market in terms of the approach, there are also similarities between the OnePlus not and one plus, not CE. So like the original knot, this new one plus phone also follows a minimalistic Scandinavian design language and appears to be a phone. That's Taylor made for the average OnePlus fan in India, but the million-dollar question is: will the similarities of one plus not c replicate the successes of the original one plus not well? My name is Sushant altar, and I'm here to help answer this and many more questions about the new OnePlus note c, but before we begin, don't forget to subscribe to the channel and hit the bell icon. So you are notified when we upload a new video.

So let's get started with our thoughts on the design and display of the OnePlus note CE. Despite being a mid-range device, that's more affordable than the OnePlus, not the company hasn't cut too many corners here as a result. What we have is a phone that feels solid in the hand, does not compromise in terms of look and to top it off also has an above bar display for a mid-range phone. The OnePlus not c shares many design elements without nod and brings with itself a design language that focuses on keeping things clean and simple. As such, we have no curved displays or eye-catching camera bumps.

Instead, we get a phone that just sits in your palm and looks elegant from the moment. You take the north c5g outfits retail packaging. The device starts to impress with its finely crafted exteriors at 7.9 mm. The OnePlus, not c5g, is also the slimmest one plus smartphone since the launch of the OnePlus 6t, it's also quite lightweight at 170 grams, which makes it easy to carry around. However, despite its lightweight nature, the phone does not feel toy life, as it has a balanced heft to it.

Another interesting thing to note here is that OnePlus has managed to add a 3.5 mm jack to the device, a feature that was missing from the original OnePlus note. Last year, moving to the back of the phone, we have a back panel that flaunts a soft matte finish. This not only makes it look premium, but also nice to touch keeping with the clean underneath in design language of the device. The back panel features only a small OnePlus logo and vertically placed camera setup. As we explained earlier, all these elements come together to create a phone, that's as easy on the eyes as it is on the pocket.

However, if you're comparing it to the OnePlus knot from last year, there are some design differences. Sadly, these also make the not c5g the inferior offering of the two. So, for example, unlike the original knot, this new phone from the word series misses out on the iconic alert slider, which was a major differentiating factor for the OnePlus phones. There is also no gorilla glass protection on the back panel of the device. Moving on to the display, we have a 6.3 inch. Fluid AMOLED panel on the front of the phone.

This panel can run a maximum full HD plus resolution. It also offers a high pixel density and is capable of handling fast refresh rates of 90 hertz, since it's an AMOLED panel in the make, there's also support for always on display feature in our time with the device we found the performance of the display to be quite good. It feels premium and works almost as well as any other panel fitted on an OnePlus phone in the past, even under direct sunlight. The display can get plenty bright and also outputs, vibrant and punchy colors. Apart from this, the display also offers good viewing angles.

Text. Legibility is also up to the mark and overall, the display helps the phone emerge as a good option for users looking to buy a device for playing games and watching videos and movies online. Underneath the hood, the OnePlus not ce5g, brings with itself a Qualcomm snapdragon 750 g chipset, which offers a decent punch in terms of performance manufactured using Samsung's a10m process. This chipset offers design similarities with the snapdragon 765g. Yes, the very chipset that powered the OnePlus note.

This chipset uses a base configuration of two performance arms: cortex a77 cores clocked at 2.2 gigahertz sat next to six efficient, a55 cores which run at 1.8 gigahertz for graphics. We have the Arduino 619 GPU on the chipset, which delivers pretty much the same kind of performance as the GPU on the snapdragon 765 g. This chipset also brings support for 5g to the OnePlus, not CE for smooth performance. OnePlus has paid the phone with 12gb of ram on the top end variant of the device. However, there are also 6gb and 8gb ram variants of the phone.

During our review, we found this core hardware coming together to ensure that the phone performed as well as it was advertised while the chipset isn't the most powerful in the business. It still does offer enough power to handle graphically demanding games and heavy applications. The phone is equally adept at multitasking between lightweight apps as part of a gaming test. We ran both Call of Duty, mobile and asphalt line, legends at max out settings and did not notice any frame drops or stutters. Only issue we experienced with the device was slightly high load time for gaming.

However, even that wasn't anything really to get too upset about. This was something that was backed up by the results of benchmarks. We ran to test the device, as you can see, on your screens right now, an tutu geek bench and 3d mark all threw up decent numbers when we benchmark the Nazi, as is the case with most OnePlus devices. The camera department is one of the major areas of focus with the OnePlus naught c. The device gets a triple lens setup, with a primary pixel bin, 64 megapixel lens and support for electronic image.

Stabilization. The lens flaunts, a good aperture size for decent low light performance, but more on that later, for now, let's get through the specifications of the camera setup sat next to the primary lens is secondary, ultra-wide camera. This is an 8 megapixel lens with a 119 degree field of view and an aperture size of f 2.25. OnePlus has also backed this lens with as for stabilization to make up the numbers, we also have a two megapixel mono lens on the device. The setup is backed by OnePlus camera software.

That brings a number of features to the table. As for performance, the two main lenses are a bit of a mixed bag. Talking about the primary lens, we got good daytime performance and decent low light results, although the latter can be significantly improved using the phone's nights cape mode in well-lit conditions, pictures come out, vibrant and with accurate colors. These shots also offer good dynamic range. Pictures clicked using the primary lens offer a good amount of detail to ensure there is little loss, even if you zoom or crop an image.

Much of what we observe about the primary lens is also true for the ultrawide lens pictures like using this lens in daytime generally came out. Fine, however, we did notice a slightly lower amount of detailed retention and some amount of fish eye effect in the images clicked using this lens. But despite its shortcomings, the ultrawide lens manages to do what it promises as it increases the scope of the frame at the press of a button and enables the user to click sweeping views thanks to its 119 degree, field of view, there's no macro lens on the device and that's something we definitely think should have been included on the OnePlus, not CE. Without the presence of a dedicated lens. The phone's primary camera fails to capture usable macro shots which, depending on how you use your phone's camera, could be a dealbreaker for some, but even as the Nazi 5g falters in the macro performance, it recovers some lost round with the computational photography mode, such as portrait and nights cape.

Both these modes significantly improve the usability of the phone's cameras with the former clicking nice both shots with creamy blur effect, while the latter enhancing the quality of image in low light conditions. During our time with the OnePlus word, we clicked a number of low light shots with the nights cape mode, enabled the resultant images showed improvement in detail, proving that OnePlus camera software was not just artificially brightening up images by increasing exposure time, but was actually stitching together. Multiple images to create a master image with improved detail, highlights and shadows. While we're not saying the results achieved were on the same level as those from higher end phones, they were definitely better than a lot of mid-range offering which failed to implement night mode. Well.

Moving on to the battery department, the OnePlus word c5g provided expected results. The phone does just about enough to hold its own, even if it doesn't go with the extra mile to help itself stand out from the cloud. The phone comes with a 4500 my battery pack that also promises 30 watt fast charging. However, before you can actually get to the charging of the device, the phone's energy efficient, chipset and its highly optimized UI ensure there is little battery drain when you are doing simple tasks like texting, browsing the web or even video calling the north CE 5g battery also handles videos well with the phone returning over 15 hours of runtime during a video loop test. So if you're, a medium heavy user and your phone's average day includes streaming content from Netflix clicking photos and browsing the internet, then the OnePlus not c5g, should easily get you through a day and some more so is the OnePlus not c worth buying.

At first glance, the OnePlus not CE will convince you that it has everything you need from your next matrix smartphone. However, a closer inspection will reveal that you're, possibly better off, steering clear of the device and that's not because it's a bad smartphone in fact, at Trippe's, 22 triple nine. The north c 5g is a good option. If you're looking for a new smartphone that sits right at the heart of the mid-range segment. However, its biggest problem is the competition that exists in the segment and its inability to effectively stand out from the crowd from the missing alert slider to the macro lens.

There are lost opportunities that effectively hamper the OnePlus Nazi's ability to compete, not only against slightly better spec devices such as the Poco x3 pro, which offers a faster display, bigger battery and more powerful processor, but also makes it look weak against the original OnePlus knot, which, despite being slightly more expensive, looks like the better of the two phones. That was our review of the OnePlus north ce5g. If you liked it, please help us by clicking the like button and sharing the video with your friends, also make sure to hit the bell icon so that you don't miss out on any future videos from us. Thanks for watching.


Source : Digit

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