Final Words

After using the OnePlus 2 for quite some time and going over the results of my testing, I can't say I'm thrilled with how things turned out for OnePlus's second smartphone. There are a lot of really odd regressions from the original, and when that's accompanied by an increase in price it makes me wonder why someone wouldn't seek out a OnePlus One, or a smartphone from a different vendor entirely. There were definitely some improvements over the OnePlus One as well, some of which are due to the changes in software that have been made since that time. Before making any conclusions, I'd like to go over the major aspects of the OnePlus 2 and see how they hold up to both the OnePlus One, and the rest of the competition in the increasingly competitive smartphone space.

Unfortunately, the OnePlus 2's display was one of the first things I realized represented a regression from the OnePlus One. Right when I started using the phone it was clear that the color rendition was not in line with what I have seen on recent smartphones. Measurements of the display confirmed that it's far too blue, and not accurate beyond matching the primary colors of the sRGB gamut. The substantial changes to the display characteristics that often come with OTA updates never actually improve the display in any meaningful way, and the fact that the accuracy is such an enormous regression from the OnePlus One is just completely unacceptable.

Performance is another area where the OnePlus 2 is extremely disappointing. Snapdragon 810's issues are well documented at this point, but the OnePlus 2 ends up being the worst implementation that I've seen, with the Cortex A57 cores never being used at all in circumstances like web browsing or when navigating the UI. It makes the phone feel like a Moto E, which is something I remarked on before even realizing exactly what was wrong with the CPU's behavior. When considering the performance of the OnePlus 2, it's more accurate to think of it as buying a quad core Cortex A53 device than a 4x4 Cortex A57 + Cortex A53 device.

Thankfully, it's not all bad news. While the performance is certainly not what you'd expect from the advertised specs, the phone gets pretty great battery life as a result. The construction of the phone is also quite good, with very few visible seams due to the type of back cover attachment method OnePlus has used. I'm still not a fan of the back cover material, but I recognize that as a very subjective feeling and so I wouldn't consider that as an aspect that is necessarily positive or negative. As for the camera, OnePlus has put some significant effort into improving their image processing, and there's no longer any issue with chroma noise across the frame even in broad daylight. I think OnePlus still has room to improve in this regard, particularly where noise reduction is concerned, but in its current state the OnePlus 2 produces fairly good photos considering its price tag.

Unfortunately, even with a decent camera, good battery life, and a nice chassis, the OnePlus 2 simply has too many flaws that can't be overlooked. Like the original, the OnePlus 2's tagline is "Never Settle". Unfortunately, the OnePlus 2 does make you settle in many ways. You have to settle for not having Quick Charge 2.0 support, and you have to settle for not having NFC which locks you out of Android Pay. You have to settle for a very poorly calibrated display which pales in comparison to the original. Most disappointing of all is that you have to settle for poor performance, when moving through the UI, browsing the web, and doing anything remotely CPU intensive. You have to settle for a great number of concessions, many of which didn't exist on the OnePlus One, and none of which should exist at this price point.

At $389, you can find much better smartphones, such as the Nexus 5X, or you can search for sales on phones like the Galaxy S6 or LG G4 if you're in a region where the Nexus phones end up being much more expensive than Google's price in North America. Even the OnePlus One would offer a better overall experience. Regardless of what your needs are when buying a smartphone, I think there will be better options available to you than the OnePlus 2.

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  • mcbhagav - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Nexus 5x - 329$, and has a well calibrated display. ( visit review in this site).
  • Antoine. - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    And still no Nexus 6P review...
  • 5th element - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Complaining won't make it appear any faster. Anand are aware that people want it.
  • mmsmsy - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    I would really love to see a thorough review of one of the new chinese phones, f.e. Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 or Meizu Metal. These are really cheap (200$ for 3GiB RAM and 32GB NAND) and are receiving great reviews. I don't think that typical European/US (OnePlus included) brands would look this good in comparison. And it would be nice to see it verified on one of the sites like this. Please tell me what You think.
  • evancox10 - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    First paragraph under NAND Performance, did you mean to say OnePlus *Two* instead?
  • Brandon Chester - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Indeed I did. Thank you.
  • cknobman - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Their invite system ruined it for me, and will eventually ruin it for OnePlus as well.

    I wanted to buy one of these very badly and was doing everything asked for several months to get an invite. Social media, forums, etc.. heck we jumped through hoops like a trained monkey yet received nothing from OnePlus.

    September rolls around and no invite and my wife could not wait any longer so we bought her and LG G4.

    Then in November I started getting invites and emails from them. In the last month I have received 4 different invites from OnePlus. Sorry guys the ship has sailed.

    What you think is a clever marketing scheme and hype generator actually pisses customers off and drives them to other products.

    OnePlus, your products are good, but not THAT GOOD. Get rid of the stupid invite system, have a regular store, or continue to turn away customers.

    I'd imagine sales cannot be that great anymore if you continue to send me invite after invite.
  • cknobman - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Ok after reading the entire review thank goodness we did not buy this thing.

    Poor implementation of the SOC and definitely not worth buying over competitors.
  • amdwilliam1985 - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    felt the same, I'm so glad I got the 6P over OP2, after seeing this review, it is shameful to even consider OP2 next to the all mighty 6P(of course until Anandtech finds a way to ruin it ;).
  • DanD85 - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    The OnePlus One was quite a groundbreaking device at its time, too bad OnePlus fails to follow it with a worthy successor. Hopefully they'll learn their lessons and come back with a better OnePlus 3.

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