HIGHLIGHTS
The OnePlus 8 uses the Snapdragon 865 SoC and supports 5G
Battery life, gaming performance, and the display are its strong suits
It doesn’t get an IP rating or wireless charging like the Pro model
The OnePlus 8 starts at Rs. 41,999 for the Amazon-exclusive 6GB RAM variant
When OnePlus first announced the 8 and 8 Pro, it felt like the 7 series from last year all over again. The OnePlus 8 seemed somewhat left in the shadow of the 8 Pro, and this time, it doesn’t even have a killer starting price.
With prices starting well above Rs. 40,000, the OnePlus 8₹ 39,999 is now bordering on flagship territory, which means it’s actually competing directly with older flagships from Samsung and Apple.
Compared to the 7T, the main new features of OnePlus 8 are 5G support and a new-ish design. The OnePlus 8 features the Snapdragon 865 processor, which promises better performance and efficiency over last year’s model. 5G doesn’t mean much to us in India at the moment but it doesn’t hurt to have it.
OnePlus 8 Design
The Onyx Black version of the OnePlus 8 has a glossy finish, which picks up fingerprints very easily. It’s also very slippery, which did result in accidental drops when I had the phone lying on a chair’s armrest. There’s a case provided in the box, which should help.
The display now has a hole-punch cutout, in the upper left corner. OnePlus has said goodbye to the notch and I think it’s for the best. The hole-puch isn’t the smallest I’ve seen but it gives the OnePlus 8 a fresh look.
The OnePlus 8 is surprisingly comfortable to hold given its display size. It’s also slim and not too heavy. The black version looks fine. As you’d expect, build quality is excellent thanks to the curved-edge front and back glass sandwiching the metal frame. The buttons are easy to reach, and the alert slider is handy as always. The USB Type-C port, SIM tray, and main speaker are lined up on the bottom.
OnePlus 8 Display
The display is one of the most important parts of any smartphone, and the OnePlus 8 has a very good one. It’s a 6.55-inch AMOLED panel with sloping sides, a wide colour gamut, and a hole-punch cutout in the upper left corner. OnePlus has used 3D Corning Gorilla Glass in addition to the pre-applied screen protector.
Other specifications include a resolution of 2400×1080 (full-HD+) pixels, HDR10+ support, a 90Hz refresh rate, and software features like reading mode, night mode, and the ability to boost colours when playing videos.
The 90Hz refresh rate makes usage in general feel fluid and snappy. You can drop down to 60Hz if you want to save a bit of battery power. HDR content looks very good on the OnePlus 8. When playing compatible shows through Netflix, the brightness and colour saturation automatically get a boost. This goes back to normal once you exit the app.
The OnePlus 8 has an in-display fingerprint sensor, which is super quick at authentication. All it takes is a quick, firm tap to unlock it. Face recognition is equally fast and works decently well in dim lighting. You can enable the ‘double-tap to wake’ gesture, but what I really wanted was a raise-to-wake gesture, which is still not an option.
The ‘Ambient display’ feature offers a peek at which apps have sent you alerts when the screen is off, along with the time, battery level, etc. However this isn’t always-on and only shows up when you tap the screen or pick up the phone. It even shows you the name of the music track being played, but you can’t control playback from here.
One thing to note is that since the hole-punch cutout isn’t very close to the top edge, any app that needs to black out this area will have to create a thick black bar. This is most noticeable in some games and video apps, when you need to hold the phone horizontally. You can also black out the area permanently but that just looks odd.
OnePlus 8 Performance
With its top-end hardware, it’s hardly surprising that performance from the OnePlus 8 is impressive. However, what really caught our attention is that it doesn’t heat up all that much in the process.
We reviewed the top-end variant of the OnePlus 8, which has 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage, priced at Rs. 49,999. There’s also an option with 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage for Rs. 44,999, and an Amazon-exclusive variant with 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage at Rs. 41,999.
Gaming performance is top-notch. Fortnite can run at 90fps and the experience is good, but you’ll have to manually change this in the settings. Other equally demanding games such as PUBG Mobile and Call of Duty: Mobile ran just fine too. We tried a bunch of racing games including Asphalt 9: Legends and Metal Madness, both of which ran at their highest graphics settings and were quite fun to play.
Game Space is a neat utility that lets you temporarily lock the brightness level, disable incoming notifications, and reduce distractions when gaming.
Games and movies are especially enjoyable thanks to the very good stereo speakers on the OnePlus 8. The earpiece and bottom-firing speaker work together to produce very good, balanced stereo sound. Dolby Atmos enhancement also helps boost the low and mid-range frequencies, which gives the sound added depth and clarity.
Apart from 5G, the OnePlus 8 also features Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.1, NFC, multiple navigation satellite systems, and all the usual sensors. You can use two Nano-SIM cards in the OnePlus 8, but there’s no option to expand the storage.
OnePlus 8 Software
OxygenOS is one of the reasons that fans keep coming back to OnePlus smartphones. We received a few updates after unboxing the OnePlus 8, and at the time of this review, it was running v10.5.8. This is based on Android 10, with the May security patch. The interface is clean and free from bloatware. You won’t find ads or annoying alerts from stock apps clogging up your notifications shade.
At the same time, it’s also well equipped with lots of shortcuts and gestures waiting to be discovered. The new launcher now offers a more seamless multitasking experience, there’s 5GB of free cloud storage for backups once you sign in with a OnePlus account, a built-in screen recorder, and dynamic wallpapers.
OnePlus 8 Cameras
Cameras have always been a bit of a touchy subject for OnePlus. While the 8 Pro gets some notable improvements in terms of sensors, the 8 has to make do with hand-me-downs from the 7T and one very notable reduction.
The OnePlus 8 has the same 48-megapixel Sony IMX586 sensor with optical stabilisation as the 7T. However, it has a slightly narrower aperture of f/1.75, compared to the wider (read: better) f/1.6 aperture of the 7T. The wide-angle camera has the same 16-megapixel resolution, but again, with a marginally narrower field of view of 116 degrees (117 on the 7T).
In daylight, the OnePlus 8’s primary camera captures detailed images with vivid colours and balanced HDR. I was surprised at how closely the wide-angle camera matched the colours and overall tone of the main one, as we’ve often seen a mis-match with other phones. Close-ups looked good too, with plenty of details and saturated colours. Portrait mode works well and OnePlus also claims that face recognition for portraits works on cats and dogs.
Low-light photos are decent, and the app automatically brightens images when shooting with the main camera, without the need to switch to Nightscape mode. In fact, I found very little difference between a regular photo and one shot with Nightscape. This does not apply to the wide-angle camera though, which captures terrible low-light shots in auto mode, but delivers better results with Nightscape enabled.
The 16-megapixel front camera is not bad as long as you give it enough light. During the day, selfies had good detail and HDR was handled well too, when shooting against the light. Low-light selfies looked heavily processed, and depending on the location of the light source, the results varied wildly. Portrait mode often failed to detect our outline correctly too.
The OnePlus 8 can record up to 4K resolution video at 60fps, which isn’t as flashy as having 8K 30fps like on the Mi 10, but I don’t foresee many complaining about this.
The quality at 4K is very good, footage is stabilised well, and the colour tone is retained even when you switch to the wide-angle camera.
OnePlus 8 Battery
The OnePlus 8 has a decently big 4,300mAh battery, which lasted me a day and half on average. My usage wasn’t particularly camera-heavy, but I did play a lot of games and watch a lot of Netflix, and still easily managed to sail past a full day.
When usage was light, the OnePlus 8 even managed to last till the end of the second day. Considering the display was at 90Hz constantly, I would call this pretty good. Our battery loop test echoed this, running for nearly 22 hours.
Charging the phone is very quick, thanks to the Warp Charge 30T charger. Topping up a fully depleted battery took a little more than an hour, but in 30 minutes, you can charge the battery up to 61 percent.
Final Verdict
The short answer would be — yes, absolutely. OnePlus 8 is truly an amazing device and if you are only looking for the best performance and best looks –then this is the device for you.