These days, very few smartphone launches excite people enough to queue up for hours in the street. Apple's iPhones are pretty much the exception to the rule.
Yet on a warm, sticky day in central London, more than 200 people snaked around the streets outside the SwiftKey offices near London Bridge just to get a glimpse at the OnePlus 2, a smartphone few have even heard of.
Key Features
- 5.5in display (1920 x 1080)
- Snapdragon 810/ 4GB RAM
- 9.85mm/175g
- USB-C port
- OxygenOS (based on Android 5.1)
- 13MP/5MP cameras
- Dual SIM
- Fingerprint sensor
- Price: £239
- Release date: 11 August (with invite)
The long queue – and the one million-plus people who have registered interest in the OnePlus 2 online – is testament to the hype the company generated on the back of the surprising success of the OnePlus One, which launched 15 months ago and sold 1.5 million units.
OnePlus 2 is selling its second smartphone (as it did its first) as a "flagship killer", and not only the flagship models from Apple and Samsung out now but the ones coming in 2016 too.
OnePlus 2: Design
Key Features
- 5.5in display (1920 x 1080)
- Snapdragon 810/ 4GB RAM
- 9.85mm/175g
- USB-C port
- OxygenOS (based on Android 5.1)
- 13MP/5MP cameras
- Dual SIM
- Fingerprint sensor
- Price: £239
- Release date: 11 August (with invite)
Bulky and heavy were my initial thoughts when I saw the specs announced for the OnePlus 2. At 9.5mm and 175g, is it heavier and thicker than the iPhone 6 Plus and Galaxy S6. But holding it, the first thing that came to mind was how solid it felt.
OnePlus has added a touch of premium-build quality with a metal frame around the edge, but the rear cover remains plastic – though there are alternative covers you can get with various finishes such as wood and sandstone, which is a bit like a fine sandpaper.
OnePlus 2: Screen
Speaking of the screen, the 1920 x 1080 pixel resolution has been held up by some critics as a sign that this is not a true competitor to the flagship models from Apple and Samsung. However, from my time with the phone, I found the screen to be perfectly adequate. I known that may sound like damning with faint praise, but it is not – I found the screen sharp and at 600 nits, it is brighter than pretty much anything else on the market.
At £239, there are going to be compromises and I am not sure many people would really notice the difference between a 2K screen and this one.
OnePlus 2: Fingerprint sensor and USB-C
The OnePlus 2 has a number of selling points, with one being the fingerprint reader that it claimed before launch was faster than the iPhone. I was sceptical but having tested it out, I am seriously impressed.
Setup was simple and it never once failed to work in any orientation I tried. Even better, you do not even need to turn on the screen to get it to work as you do with the iPhone, and you do not need to swipe like you do with some other sensors.
Other unique features include the USB-C connector for charging and data transfer, which means no longer having to figure out which way you need to hold the connector when plugging it in. Obviously the iPhone's lightning connector already has this functionality but it is impressive to see OnePlus embrace it so early compared to its Android rivals.
The OnePlus 2 has a number of selling points, with one being the fingerprint reader that it claimed before launch was faster than the iPhone. I was sceptical but having tested it out, I am seriously impressed.
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