Everyone up we'll just release their newest high-end mid-range her, the Opel Reno 3 pro 5g. This is also one of the most confusing is name, phones that I've ever come across as it's the same phone as the Phoenix 2 Neo, but a completely different phone from the Opel Reno 3 Pro non 5g, confusing naming inside it has a 90 Hertz display a good chipset and a promising camera setup. So is this the mid-range err that you should buy? I'm Angie for Jesus, marina, and this is our review of the Opel Reno 3 Pro 5g, despite not being one of the Reno three Pro 5g has a look and in hand feel of a flagship phone. It has Gorilla Glass five panels on the front and back the curve seamlessly towards the aluminum frame, with no awkward ridges to ruin the experience. There is a gradient paint job on the back and the for camera setup doesn't stick out too much. The Reno also has a cute hat trick, or rather bottom trick, because the bottom of the phone is flat and can stand up on its own.
More importantly, the ergonomics of this phone are fantastic, it's thin light and bottom heavy, so it's really comfortable in the hand, and it's more difficult for it to topple over as you're using it. The Reno loves fingerprints and can be a little slippery as far as durability goes. The phone feels solid and well-made, but it's still glass and there's no IP protection. As far as we know, speaking of fingerprints, the optical fingerprint reader is flawless as it's fast, accurate and responsive on the front. You'll find that the display has a punch, hole in the upper left, corner and gently curved edges with minimal color shift.
This isn't always the case with curved screens, so it's nice to see other than that. The 6.5 inch AMOLED panel itself has a full HD plus resolution and a 90 Hertz refresh rate joining the increasing number of phones that offer a butter smooth experience. In this sense, we got a maximum of 510, that's in manual mode and 544 nits in auto, depending on what you're looking at you might struggle with sunlight legibility. If it's a really bright day, color accuracy was the middle of the road with blueish White's. Sadly, there's no HDR here either the Reno 3 pro 5g has a stereo speakers' setup with a downward facing speaker on the bottom and when hiding in a top bezel of the phone.
Loudness is above average, while sound quality was adequate, there's not much bass, which isn't much of a surprise. Considering the size of these speakers, but vocals were crystal clear with 4025 William hours, the Reno 3 pro/5 via has an average battery capacity for 2020, but surprisingly, it got 100 hours of endurance on our tests with the 90 Hertz mode switched on, which is a great result. The 30 watt vogue charger allowed for some impressive charging as well you'll get from 0 to 72% in half an hour and a full charge in only 48 minutes. The Reno has a snapdragon 765, g-- chipset and either 8 or 12 gigs of ram that I, and the name is supposed to signify that it's more gaming oriented though we found that in general, it was quite similar in performance to the regular 765. It's more than good enough for day-to-day use and performed at more or less the same level as the Men 10 light and the LG velvet, the Reno 3 pro 5g has color OS 7 on top of Android 10, which is quite the jump from color OS 6 looks wise.
The UI is more stock --is-- in an offer. A cleaner overall experience, it's also incredibly customizable. You can switch up the always-on display, which Oh boys calling screen off clock for some reason: change up the edge light effects for different notifications, and you'll also find a system-wide dark mode. You'll find three types of navigation options, classic buttons and two types of gestures. Furthermore, you can either swipe from the bottom or swipe in from the sides, which is more akin to stock Android 10 gestures.
Furthermore, you can also choose what happens when you swipe down in the middle of the home screen. Either you can bring up the global search like before, or you can have it bring down the notification shade. I prefer the latter, because it makes for a smoother one hand, experience the Reno 3 Pro 5g has three proper cameras on the back. There is a 48 megapixel main sensor with an F 1.7 aperture 8 13, megapixel telephoto, that offers 2 times zoom an 8, megapixel, ultra-wide camera and, of course, the 2 megapixel depth sensor in daylight. The main camera produces images that were adequate, but nothing breathtaking.
The processing is good for social media, with high contrast, punchy colors and an all-right dynamic range and a high level of detail. That said, you'll notice, some sharpening heels around foliage some noise in the shadows and overall lower exposures pictures, look dark even under bright sunlight. The telephoto had similar processing to the main camera in terms, exposure, colors and noise. A two-time, zoom they're plenty sharp, but at five times, they're, surprisingly quite useable to the ultra-wide camera, has more saturated colors than the other two and have slightly softer images and color fringing. In some areas, still the dynamic range lens, Corrections and even levels of detail were pretty great.
In low-light we were pleasantly surprised by the main cameras' performance. Even without night mode images, look sharp with plenty of detail in the shadows and highlights noise is minimal and colors look accurate when you switch night mode on you, get a sharper image with less noise, better dynamic range and an impressive level of detail and shadows and highlights there are some halos around straight lines, but it's still great performance for social media. To our surprise, the phone uses the telephoto for zoom photos rather than cropping in from the main sensor. Images are softer and there is more noise in the darker parts of the image but dynamic range and the level of detail were very good with night mode on the telecom produce shots with even more detail and some much-needed sharpness for its class, the ultra-wide performed decently in low-light. It wasn't particularly sharp and there was quite a lot of noise, so we definitely recommend using the night mode.
Shots had more detail, brighter shadows and much more sharpness. In fact, with this mode turned on it's one of the best ultra-wide snappers in low-light for the money portraits were really nice. The edge detection is pretty accurate and skin tones look natural. The HDR was very effective and worked even under direct sunlight selfies were a bit of a mixed bag. They had consistent colors but less than stellar sharpness, so the portraits actually look more crispy, even in scenarios with fewer lights, and they had good edge detection.
This is because they were down scaled to 8 megapixels, the RINO 3 pro 5 G can shoot 4k videos at up to 30. Fps footage was sharp with a good dynamic range, natural colors and no noise. There is an ultra steady stabilization mode that shoots at a rather odd 50 frames per. Second surprisingly, we like the 4k, stabilized footage more than the one in Full HD. That said, if you do choose to go the full HD route, the processing seems very similar to the 4 key version.
OPPO has produced a perfect phone with 5g connectivity, a flagship, feel and features. Unfortunately, its brand name is not enough for it to stand out in the West saturated market, 5g isn't even available in every country. Yet so for many people this won't be a point worth considering. There are also quite a few phones at its price that have better chipsets, like the Pope web, to throw the Realme exception, Pro and the Samsung Galaxy S 10 lights, since this is a very good device. If the price drops significantly, then you should consider this as a mid-range err, but until then it's a little hard to recommend thanks for watching stay, safe, and I'll.
See you guys next time you.
Source : GSMArena Official