What's Hot: Fantastic looks and materials for the price. Pleasing full HD AMOLED display. Low price.
What's Not: Unabashed iPhone 5 clone, lean selection of 4G LTE bands, single band WiFi and no NFC.
OnePlus disrupted the market with their first Android smartphone, the OnePlus One.
It was a big phone with very good specs for a few hundred dollars less
than the big name competition at release in April 2014. If that sounds
too good to be true, it was. It was insanely difficult to buy the
OnePlus One if you lived in the US, Canada or the EU thanks to the
company's irritating invite system. We assumed the invite system would
go away after a month or two when the company got a handle on
production, but it persisted and seems more like a marketing tool for
OnePlus to make the phones seem difficult to obtain and thus desirable.
The illusive invite, along with some dubious competitions requiring
participants to destroy perfectly good smartphones on film (among
others), stood in the way of both goodwill with customers and getting
the phone out in volume.
Fast forward 1.5 years later and OnePlus
now has the OnePlus 2 and the One Plus X, both of which launched under
the same invite system (argh!). These are the current models with the
2 being the higher end model and the X being the new really
affordable model. Happily, in early December, OnePlus made the OnePlus 2
available without an invite, but unfortunately the X still requires
one.
Now that we've gotten the invite system
out of the way, let's look at the phone itself. The OnePlus X faces
great challenges. When the One came out in early 2014, you either bought
a low end phone with mediocre looks and low end specs or you bought a
$600+ flagship. Thus the OnePlus One was an exciting phone since it
brought flagship specs under $400. 2015 was the year of the affordable
near-flagship, with more phones of note coming out in the $225-$450
range than hot new expensive flagships. OnePlus' territory was overrun,
and the X is their attempt to attack the even lower price market. It's
hard to make a $250 full retail unlocked phone that doesn't look and act
like a bundle of compromises. OnePlus managed to make a phone that
looks and feels expensive though, and performance is pretty good too.
The OnePlus X is basically the 2014
OnePlus One in a new casing with a smaller 5" screen. It has the quad
core 2.3 GHz Snapdragon 801 CPU with Adreno 330 graphics of the One,
which was top dog in early to mid-2014. It has 3 gigs of RAM and 16 gigs
of storage. For $250, we're pleased with the 3 gigs of RAM and 8 or 16
gigs of storage is standard in lower priced phones. The CPU is old, but
it's still a solid performer that's adequate to meet many users'
demands. The phone runs OxygenOS built on Android 5.1.1 Lollipop.
Android 6.0 Marshmallow is out, and we wish that OnePlus would give up
on their custom Android builds (they used CyanogenMod on the OnePlus
One, but the companies parted ways abruptly). It's not that we don't
like OxygenOS- on the contrary, it's tasteful, offers a few nice
customizations and has a somewhat stock Android feel. Rather the problem
is that their in-house engineers are slow with OS releases and it's a
shame that the phone was released with Lollipop with no quick update in
sight.
The mainland China model ships with
HydrogenOS (also based on Android 5.1.1), which looks and feels a little
odd if you're accustomed to US Android builds. That said, the China
model is readily available from exporters like GearBest.com who supplied our review unit,
since there's no invite system involved. If you're kinda geeky (the
core market for OnePlus phones is enthusiasts), then it's not hard to
flash it with OxygenOS. Download the ROM image, put it in internal
storage and boot up the phone into recovery to flash it. The US OnePlus X
sold on OnePlus' website has a surprisingly limited collection of US 4G
LTE bands, and the Chinese model includes pretty much none that are
useful for the US, so you'll be stuck with HSPA+ 3G if you do buy the
Chinese model. The US version covers the basic 4G LTE bands used by
T-Mobile and AT&T, but leaves out some newer bands that those
carriers have rolled out for better coverage (band 12 on T-Mobile and
band 17 on AT&T, for example). That sets the OnePlus X behind the
also affordable but not as pretty 3rd gen Moto G. Is it possible to
flash the cell radio too and switch to US bands as it was with the
import OnePlus One? Maybe, we don't have any radio ROMs to experiment
with for the X. Call quality is quite good, even with the Chinese model
on US carriers. The phone uses a single carrier to hold your choice of 2
nano SIM cards or 1 SIM card and a microSD card.
In terms of looks, the OnePlus X is
unparalleled in this price range. It's clad in glass front and back
(Gorilla Glass 3 on the front) and it has metal sides. The US version is
available in black with silver sides (called Onyx) and there's a more
expensive limited edition with a ceramic back. In China it's available
with white glass and gold sides (called Champagne). The phone is an
unabashed iPhone 5 clone, right down to the silence slider on the left
side that's standard for iPhones but never on Android phones. Copy or
no, it's great looking, and casing build quality is excellent with no
gaps, creaks or squeaks. The bad news is that it's very slippery, but a
silicone case is included that improves grip without making the phone
bulky or ugly.
The
phone has a standard micro USB 2.0 port, and the 2525 mAh battery is
sealed inside. This isn't a Qualcomm Quick Charge phone, nor does it
support wireless charging, but that's fair given the low price. Battery
life is good and the phone lasted us from 8am to 10pm on a charge (4.5
hours of screen on time). The small 5" AMOLED display is power frugal,
and at 1920 x 1080, it looks sharp and has AMOLED's signature vibrant
colors and deep blacks. The display is cool (whites tend toward the
blue) and there's no software adjustment on the OxygenOS models.
Interestingly the Chinese HydrogenOS models do have color temperature
settings.
Though the Snapdragon 801 chipset
supports dual band WiFi, the OnePlus X has single band WiFi 802.11n,
either to reduce licensing costs or to give you a reason to spend $70
more on the higher end OnePlus 2 (which I'd recommend if you must have a
OnePlus and can afford it). The phone has Bluetooth 4.0 and the usual
GPS with GLONASS but no NFC. It has a microSD card slot to expand
storage for videos, photos and other files.
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The front 8MP
camera provides fairly sharp video chat footage and decent selfies,
while the rear 13MP camera is just OK. Again, this is a $250 phone, so
we can't expect a Galaxy S6 or LG G4 level camera here. Images have a
slightly magenta-green bias and high contrast stymies it, so you'll see
white-out in bright outdoor shots. Indoor shots are reasonably good with
the flash, and recorded 1080p video seems to suffer from frame drops if
the camera or subject moves.
Conclusion
The OnePlus X faces competition
not only from the OnePlus 2 (just $70 more) but the very likeable and
good Moto G 3rd edition. There are of course other budget choices like
the Alcatel OneTouch Idol 3 (not quite as pretty but more LTE bands and a
bigger screen), last year's Samsung Galaxy S5 on discount and some
lower end Lumia phones if you're open to Windows Phone. The OnePlus X is
by far the most attractive and classy looking of the lot, and it's one
of the few that's 5" for those with smaller hands and pockets. Call
quality is good, OxygenOS is pleasing, though we wish the phone ran with
a new Android base and the phone has expandable storage. For $250, as
long as you don't need more LTE bands in your coverage area, it's an
impressive phone. We wish we could be as enthused about the company's
marketing and inventory mangement practices as we are by the phone.
Website: www.oneplus.net
Price: $250, our unit came from GearBest.com
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