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The OnePlus 8 is the thinking-man's 5G phone right now

AndroidPIT oneplus 8 back2 cs2
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The OnePlus 8, along with its bigger brother the OnePlus 8 Pro, was launched at a series of Online pop-up events today. Fancy launch events are on hold for all smartphone manufacturers at the moment, as the live stream keynote becomes the saving grace. I was able to go hands-on with the OnePlus 8 ahead of the launch.

OnePlus 8
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OnePlus 8 release date and price

The OnePlus 8 will go on sale in Europe on April 21, 2020. OnePlus has been sneaking its prices up for some time now, and the days of the flagship killer seem like a long time ago. The OnePlus 8 starts at £599€699/$699 for the variant with 8GB of RAM and 128GB of internal storage. The 12/256GB costs £699/€799/$799.

Long-time OnePlus fans may complain about the price increases the brand has undergone, but for 5G smartphone in 2020, the new OnePlus 8 is competitive. This will go head to head with phones such as the Nokia 8.3 5G, which is priced in the same ballpark.

The OnePlus 8 is available in Onyx Black, Interstellar Glow, and Glacial Green. In the box you'll get a silicone case, a pre-installed screen protector, a 30W faster charger and the iconic red USB-C charging cable the brand is known for.

A slim body that houses a 5G modem

At the beginning of last year, the OnePlus 7 and 7 Pro were quite different in terms of design. When the 7T and 7T Pro came out in the autumn, this 7T inherited a lot of the tech from the 7 Pro, but the two OnePlus devices remained clearly distinguishable thanks largely to the camera module and the curved edges of the display. For 2020, the OnePlus 8 and 8 Pro move closer together design-wise. On the outside, only the extra Color Filter Camera sets them apart. On the inside, however, the differences are massive.

One misconception around the theme of 5G smartphones is that they have to be big and bulky to make space for the modem. The OnePlus 8 debunks that myth. At 8mm, this is really thin for a 5G smartphone. The camera bump is also relatively slim, thanks largely to the fact that there is no telephoto lens or any periscope technology in here, but I'll come onto the cameras later.

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The OnePlus 8 is slim, and the camera bump is minimal by today's standards. / © NextPit

The trademark notification slider from OnePlus also lives on . This somewhat old-school feature is something I forget about when I am testing phones from other manufacturers but is always a pleasant reminder when I pop my SIM card into a OnePlus again. Whilst the Onyx Black and Interstellar Glow versions feature a glossy finish, the Glacial Green review sample I tested is a matte finish. It's matte to the eye, but not so much to the touch.

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The notification slider is alive and well, and the OnePlus 8 is nice and slim despite the 5G modem inside. / © NextPit

Last year's AMOLED display

The display of the OnePlus 8 will be familiar to those who own a OnePlus 7T. The 6.55-inch AMOLED display is seemingly unchanged from last year's non-Pro model. The resolution still comes in at 1080 x 2400 and the refresh rate is still 90Hz, unlike the 120Hz we have seen from Samsung and Oppo this year, as well as the OnePlus 8 Pro. The brand calls this combination its Fluid Display, and it's an appropriate name. Everything looks bright, sharp and silky smooth when in motion.

One thing that is new this year is OnePlus' Eye Care Plan. An internal luminescent material now displays content clearly in direct sunlight. It's not like a software trick that you can see working when you pull your phone out of your pocket, but I had no problems using the phone outdoors on a bright, sunny day in Berlin.

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Not much innovation in the display this year, but it's still a great AMOLED running at 90Hz. / © NextPit

The other difference to the OnePlus 8 display from the 7T is the top. The dewdrop-shaped notch has been replaced with a hole-punch in the top left corner of the display. This selfie camera placement is the same on both the OnePlus 8 and 8 Pro this year, and the company seems to have given up on its pop-up camera. For me, it's a shame, as I am a huge fan of full, uninterrupted displays.

The subtle curves of the 7T are also gone, and the OnePlus 8 now falls away at the sides at a much more aggressive angle. Curved displays have their fans and their haters, and I fall somewhere in the middle. The OnePlus 8 feels lovely in your hand as a result of the curved edges, but the back gesture just doesn't feel right to me on any curved-display smartphone. OnePlus is now as curved at the edges as Samsung used to be before the Galaxy S20 series reined it in a bit.

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The dewdrop notch is out, and a hole-punch in the top left corner is in. / © NextPit

Textbook OnePlus 'snappiness'

The OnePlus packs a Snapdragon 865 SoC from Qualcomm combined with either 8GB or 12GB of LPDDR4X RAM. The GPU is an Adreno 650. As this is a 5G smartphone, a Qualcomm X55 modem is also packed into the hardware. You get 128GB of UFS 3.0 storage in the base model, which is a little on the light side for a smartphone in 2020.

In terms of performance, you can expect typical OnePlus happiness here. The test sample I was given was the 12/256GB version, and I was able to run some benchmark tests on it ahead of the launch. As you can see in the direct comparison with the OnePlus 8 Pro below, there is little between the two phones in terms of raw performance. Both will be able to handle almost anything you can throw at them, from multi-tasking to gaming.

OnePlus 8 benchmark results comparison

  OnePlus 8 OnePlus 8 Pro OnePlus 7T
3D Mark Sling Shot Extreme ES 3.1 7079 7122 6020
3D Mark Sling Shot Volcano 6899 6613 5245
3D Mark Sling Shot ES 3.0 8998 8864 6649
Geekbench 5 (Single / Multi) 910 / 3341 887 / 3313 786 / 2825
PassMark Memory 27705 27118 32960
PassMark Disk 41757 50083 50068

We may not be attending any major tech events any time soon, but one thing you will notice when you go to these things is that OnePlus is still a very popular brand for tech journalists. I'm reminded of why this is every time I spend time with a new OnePlus smartphone. The combination of software optimization and hardware is still the best in the industry for fluid performance in my opinion. There is just a certain snappiness to this recipe that you don't get elsewhere to the same degree. Before using the OnePlus 8 as my daily driver, I had my SIM in the Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra, and even that $1,400 phone doesn't feel as quick as non-Pro OnePlus 8 does.

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OnePlus still makes the fastest phones, at least in terms of how quick they feel under operation. / © NextPit

I will be conducting more intensive performance tests of the OnePlus 8 for the final review, so stay tuned for that. I will also be digging deeper into the software in the near future. OnePlus typically released software patches around the launch of a new phone, so I refrained from critiquing the software side for now.

Minor camera upgrades for the non-Pro OnePlus 8

The OnePlus 8 comes with a triple camera that is will be familiar to those who bought the OnePlus 7T Pro. The main camera is still the Sony IMX586 we saw on last year's flagship. The 16-megapixel ultra-wide-angle sensor is almost unchanged from last year too. Interestingly, the 3x Telephoto Zoom camera from the 7T Pro has been replaced with a 2-megapixel macro lens. In a market where zoom is big business, the only thing you get on the OnePlus 8 is a 2x in-sensor zoom. The details are as follows:

Main sensor

  • Sony IMX586
  • Megapixels: 48
  • Pixel size: 0.8 μm
  • Lens pieces: 6P
  • OIS: Yes
  • EIS: Yes
  • Aperture: f/1.75

Ultra-wide-angle

  • Megapixels: 16
  • Aperture: f/2.2
  • Field of View: 116°

Macro camera

  • Megapixels: 2
  • Pixel size: 1.75 μm
  • OIS: No
  • Aperture: f/2.4

Selfie camera

  • Sony IMX471
  • Megapixels: 16
  • Pixel size: 1.0 μm
  • EIS: Yes
  • Autofocus: Fixed focus
  • Aperture: f/2.0

In terms of video, the OnePlus 8 supports 4K video at 30/60 fps, 1080p video at 30/60 fps, and Super Slow Motion video in 720p at 480 fps, or 1080p at 240 fps. The multi autofocus supports PDAF and CAF, but not LAF as on the OnePlus 8 Pro.

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The camera arrangement on the back of the OnePlus 8 is almost minimalist in 2020. / © NextPit

We'll be digging into the camera hardware and software for the full review, but during the handful of test shots I have been able to take so far, the OnePlus 8 camera performs well, if not spectacular. The weakness here lies in the number of creative options you have, which many rival manufacturers are now offering in this price range.

Warp Charge via cable only

The battery in the OnePlus 8 Pro is a 4,300 mAh cell. Fans of OnePlus smartphones, and those of Oppo and Realme, will be familiar with the parent company's impressive fast-charging technology. Warp Charge 30T, as OnePlus brands it, is supported here. However, there's no wireless Warp Charge as there is on the Pro variant. Still, you get the Warp Charge 30T power adapter in the box, and it's still super fast. In well under an hour, the OnePlus 8 is fully charged.

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Warp Charge is of course supported, not only via the USB-C port at the bottom of the phone. / © NextPit

I've been using the OnePlus for about a week and can easily get a day's worth of juice out of it. However, it needs to be said that we are living under lockdown conditions and I am not using my phone under what you would call 'normal usage' conditions such as when I am out and about. I will be putting the OnePlus 8 through the battery benchmarks and real-life tests - as best I can - for the full review.

OnePlus 8 technical specifications

Early Verdict

With the 7 and 7 Pro, OnePlus made the choice for consumers very simple. The Pro packed so much more of a punch whilst the 7 felt like a year-old smartphone in a fancy new dress. With the 7T and 7T Pro, the gap was reduced significantly, almost to the point where many consumers opted for the cheaper 7T over the 7T Pro, and that was the smart choice. With the 8-series, OnePlus has widened the gap once again.

The OnePlus 8 Pro has a higher refresh rate display (120Hz), better resolution (QHD+), Wireless Warp Charge, and extra Color Filter Camera, a telephoto lens, and faster RAM (LPDDR5). Unlike with the 7T lineup, 'Pro' really does mean pro once again for OnePlus in 2020. And yet, despite that, I still think the regular OnePlus 8 is the thinking man's 5G phone to buy right now. With snappy performance and a cost-cutting in the right areas, the phone almost marks a return to OnePlus' roots. The goalposts have moved on price, that's all.

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David McCourt

David McCourt
Editor

David enjoys staying abreast of the latest technology and newest Android apps. Outside of the office, he can be found playing snooker and writing bad 00s indie songs.

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  • David Martrano 29
    David Martrano Apr 22, 2020 Link to comment

    To get the proper 5g waves with Verizon the price is 8oo.oo bucks for the base model. Plus Verizon's BLOATWARE. A bit pricey if you ask me?


  • 25
    Deactivated Account Apr 16, 2020 Link to comment

    Considering the not so huge price difference between the none pro and the pro variant, I'll suggest going for the pro variant.


  • 4
    Michael Gould Apr 15, 2020 Link to comment

    I don't see mention in the article of what bands of 5G will be supported by this phone. That is pretty important when considering a 5G phone.

    Deactivated Accountstorm


  • Rusty H. 33
    Rusty H. Apr 15, 2020 Link to comment

    Too bad it's priced higher than a "working man's" price ;)

    Deactivated Account


  • 49
    storm Apr 14, 2020 Link to comment

    So many fallacies in the title that the article doesn't bear out.

    The thinking man thinks like you. This is confirmation bias of the first order.

    Assumes 5G is what thinking people want. I disagree. People who think balance the costs vs the benefits. Costs: 1-new, usually overpriced phone with wasteful screen designs that don't offer actual function, i.e. curves, wasteful refresh rates and so on. Thinking people don't need gaming level refresh rates. The overlap between the gamer population and the intellectual population is not huge. 2-5G is a questionable value at best. It depends on where you are, and what carrier you have and what you do with your phone. As I've noted, my carrier, T-Mobile, has low frequency bands that aren't as fast, but offer better building penetration. But when I'm in a building, I've got wifi for free generally. Outside, my primary uses are text and talk. Some web. So nothing needing particularly high bandwidth. Even video doesn't saturate 4G. So there's no functional rush to 5G for a handheld device.

    When I might want high speed coverage away from the city center I don't have 5G coverage anyway.

    The quality history for OnePlus is bad. This is a huge issue routinely ignored by the editors of AndroidPit.

    Proprietary standards like warp charge are consumer hostile. Use common standards like PD so you can get full support from third party products and without being tied to one charger only.

    No, the title should be: Another fanboy OnePlus release for 5G fanboys.

    Deactivated AccountRusty H.

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