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6/10

Wired

$329 unlocked is still a pretty good price. It's solid, sturdy. OxygenOS is a really nice take on Android.

Tired

The camera's nowhere near finished. It has a dangerous tendency to overheat. Missing NFC and wireless charging.

How We Rate

  • 1/10A complete failure in every way
  • 2/10Barely functional; don’t buy it
  • 3/10Serious flaws; proceed with caution
  • 4/10Downsides outweigh upsides
  • 5/10Recommended with reservations
  • 6/10A solid product with some issues
  • 7/10Very good, but not quite great
  • 8/10Excellent, with room to kvetch
  • 9/10Nearly flawless, buy it now
  • 10/10Metaphysical product perfection

So there I was, standing on the edge of San Francisco, peering out over the bay. Directly in front of me stood a black door in a yellow frame, a tiny opening in a cavernous building blotting out the sky. I’d walked toward the smokestack on the horizon, as I’d been told to do by the kind lady who rescued me from my wrong turn into a very sketchy looking import/export outfit. I grabbed the handle, pulled, and entered the DHL building, packing slip in hand. It took me an hour to get here, on the industrial outskirts of the city. Going home would be faster, but only after I waited 10 minutes for my Uber to leave civilization and come find me.

These, my friends, are the lengths you go to if you want a OnePlus 2.

The successor to the OnePlus One, one of the most ambitious and successful debut smartphones we’ve ever seen, is a hot commodity. There are already four million people on the waiting list, and invites—not for the phone, just the right to pay $329 for it—are selling for upward of $200 on eBay. The phone is packed with changes from last year’s model, from the improved screen to the totally overhauled camera system. Its marketing language is as unabashed as ever: “Never settle,” the ads beg you. The company calls the 2 the “flagship killer.”

It’s not.

The 2 is a good phone, and a wonderfully exciting reminder of how possible it has become to build a fast, sturdy, usable smartphone. And there’s something awesomely inclusive about the teeming OnePlus fanbase, legions of people united by the device in their pocket. But there’s very little that’s special or memorable about this phone. From the camera to the software to the device itself, it’s not at all like a flagship killer.

The phone covers the basics well. The 5.5-inch, 1080p display is bright, clear, and accurate, and offers that inexplicably delightful feeling that you’re actually moving things around directly on the screen. Calls sound good, or at least no worse than any other phone. Its battery lasts a full day, usually only hitting about 20 percent before I plugged it in at night. The speaker sucks, but it’s a phone speaker—they all suck, even the ones with silly names like BoomSound. Along with 4GB of RAM, there’s a Snapdragon 810 processor inside, which is so cutting-edge it’s dangerous—people have reported their 810-powered devices getting really, problematically hot. Count me in that group: More than a few times, I picked up the 2 and found it not just warm, but seatbelt-on-a-sunny-day hot. It runs great, as fast and smooth as you’d ever want, but I can’t say I’m not worried about the fire inside.

High-end processor and all, there are a few apps that don’t work well (or at all) on the OnePlus 2. The phone runs OnePlus’s new OxygenOS, a forked version of Android that for now looks just like the unforked version of Android. Because it’s not on the standard Android update cycle, however, there are a few apps that don’t render right, a few colors and themes that don’t appear, and at least one game I found that doesn’t run at all. (I miss you, Roller Coaster Tycoon.) The most dramatic difference is a screen off to the left of your home screen called the “shelf,” which holds your most-used apps and contacts for easy access. It’s useful, if unexciting. There’s also a really handy dark mode—I call it “first thing in the morning mode”—along with some nice additional customizability ideas. It’s a really nice, mostly additive take on Android. OnePlus says there’s more to come, too, and Oxygen won’t look like plain Android for long.

But “more to come” is something of a theme for OnePlus. Like with the camera on the 2, which the company says is dramatically improved already. But there’s an update coming in a couple of months, they say, and hoo boy, look out then!

I hope so, because the camera needs a lot of work. The 2’s 13-megapixel camera can, in perfect conditions, take spectacular pictures. Sharp, clean, dynamic. But when you’re not outdoors on a perfectly overcast day shooting a stationary subject, you’re not going to like your photos. The shutter’s too slow, the lens takes too long to focus, and all too often you’re stuck getting a picture a second after something cool happened. It has some trouble with colors, too, greens in particular—photos I took in the woods looked like an overly-saturated fairy tale, or like everything had been slimed.

There are so few things left to objectively divide one smartphone from another. Performance, battery life, software; they’re so often essentially the same no matter what device you pick up. The cameras on the front and back are so important, so powerful in so many of the ways we interact with each other and the world, that a frustrating camera is a real problem. It’s hard to knock the OnePlus 2 too much, because most of the devices with better cameras are dramatically more expensive, so I’ll just say this: You get what you pay for. At least with cameras.

A few days after I started using the OnePlus 2, Samsung’s two new phones—-the Galaxy Note 5 and the Galaxy S6 Edge+—landed on my desk. I have conflicted feelings about their glassy, ostentatious designs, but I can’t get over how much smaller they feel than the OnePlus, despite having bigger screens. The 2 is a brick of a device, with straight edges and sharply rounded corners. It’s like someone hit each corner with three strokes of sandpaper and called it done. The phone’s 9.9mm thick, and its sturdy metal body weighs more than six ounces. It’s a big phone that feels bigger.

It’s not ugly, not by any stretch. It’s just sort of boring, like OnePlus decided to make the most inoffensive device possible so as not to turn off any potential customers. There are a few nice design touches, like the physical mute button that lets you quickly shut your phone up when you’re in a meeting or going to bed. I also like the black, textured back on my review unit, which feels a little like skateboard grip tape. And I love that this piece is swappable, and that OnePlus is looking into building backs with more materials.

What’s odd, though, is OnePlus made a phone with a removable back, but no swappable battery or SD cards. Not only are those useful things, they’re exactly the kind of power-user feature OnePlus users love. So is NFC, by the way, which I still can’t believe OnePlus didn’t include. Sure, it might have a really good fingerprint reader, but no mobile wallet/easy pairing/data transfer for you, OnePlus buyers!

OnePlus says it doesn’t care about price, that it doesn’t want to be known as “the cheap phone” but rather “the best phone.” If that’s true, it doesn’t make sense that the 2 doesn’t support the fast-charging standards built into just about every flagship phone on Earth. That feature would be more useful here, too, given that it’s a USB-C powered device and the charger you have probably won’t work.

Down the line, OnePlus makes strange choices with its technology. The most frustrating example is the fingerprint reader. It looks like a button and feels like a button, but it’s not a button. You can actually customize the capacitive keys, both where they are—on-screen or on-device—and in which order they display. This is dumb. In an effort to give you choice, it just makes everything confusing.

After a week using the OnePlus 2, I just don’t get it. It’s a very good phone, for the basic things phones do. It could make a very compelling case as a step up from something like the Moto G (though it’s nearly twice the price). But then why support USB-C, which is just going to annoy some buyers? And if you’re making such an effort to be future-looking, skimping on NFC and wireless charging is remarkably short-sighted. By the time USB-C is everywhere, NFC and wireless charging will be, too. So you’re either screwed now or screwed later. Pick your poison.

It’s a good phone, and most people who buy it will probably like it. But you can buy better phones, and you can buy cheaper phones. In the case of the Moto G, you can buy a cheaper phone that’s better in a lot of ways. The OnePlus 2 isn’t for the hardware-obsessed, it’s not for the price-obsessed, and it’s not killing any flagships now or ever.

I guess what I’m saying is, don’t pay $200 for an invite on eBay. Put your money toward something better.

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Read more http://www.wired.com/2015/08/review-oneplus-2/


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