

I'd dare say the in-display fingerprint sensor is the best one on the market.
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In the video below, that's an LG V40 with a standard 60Hz screen on the left, and the OnePlus 7 Pro on the right. I know Razer, which also sells a high-frame-rate phone, had to write special extensions to get games to run at higher frame rates.
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Our GFXBenchmark graphics benchmark topped out at displaying 60 frames per second, which may be a limit in the Android APIs. It actually isn't clear to me (and OnePlus couldn't help) if the 90Hz applies outside the general UI. Higher refresh rate scrolling takes more battery power, but the OnePlus 7 deals with this intelligently by reducing the refresh rate if you're watching lower-frame-rate content, like 30fps videos. Over time, the high refresh rate should mean less eyestrain. Our analyst Chris Stobing, a big PC gamer who uses high-refresh-rate gaming monitors, noticed it instantly it took me a lot longer to see it. Whether you can perceive this depends on what you're used to. In its standard UI, the OnePlus 7 displays 1.5 frames for every one frame most other phones do, resulting in what appears to be smoother scrolling. The big innovation here is the 90Hz refresh rate.

All phones have slightly cool whites, but the 7 Pro demonstrates particularly admirable, accurate performance in Vivid mode. The chart below shows the OnePlus 7 Pro's color levels as dots and DCI-P3 color levels as boxes in both Natural and Vivid modes, alongside the color performance of the OnePlus 6T and Samsung Galaxy S10+. At 411cd/m 2 in "vivid" mode and 402cd/m 2 in "natural," it's close to the Galaxy S10's maximum brightness of 435cd/m 2.

As you can see, the OnePlus 7's colors are just about the same as the Galaxy S10+'s (and they're more accurate than the OnePlus 6T's).
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I tested the screen's colors and brightness with a Klein K-80 colorimeter (Opens in a new window) and Portrait Displays' CalMAN and MobileForge software (Opens in a new window). The 6.67-inch, 3,120-by-1,440 resolution screen is a Samsung OLED panel tuned to OnePlus's specifications, and it's even comparable with the Galaxy's (and far better than, say, the Google Pixel 3's). Some condensation appeared inside the pop-up selfie camera, and the microphone was messed up for about an hour, but after a few hours, the phone was perfectly fine. I dunked and washed the phone, rather than soaking it for an extended period of time. OnePlus keeps trying to ride a line where it makes its phones sort-of-waterproof, but it doesn't pay for IP certification. The case also makes the body much grippier. The phone comes with a clear case in the box, which you should apply as soon as you get it. The phone's glass back is slightly slippery, with a smooth, cool feeling to it, and scratches easily. There's still no headphone jack or microSD slot, if those things matter to you (though OnePlus separately sells the excellent $19.99 Type-C Bullets (Opens in a new window)). There's also a ribbed mute switch that has appeared on OnePlus phones for years. The selfie camera pops up from a little cutout on the top of the phone, so even that doesn't take up space where screen could go. (Opens in a new window) Read Our Apple iPhone XR Reviewįrom the front, the phone almost looks like a Samsung with its curved OLED screen, until you realize there's no notch, just a lot of screen.

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