Final Words

The OnePlus 3 was certainly the best Android phone at the $400 price point, and it arguably had the best value for your money of any smartphone in general. The OnePlus 3T is a successor to the OnePlus 3, being better in some ways and equally good in all others. Normally that would make it a natural replacement for the OnePlus 3, and OnePlus seems to think so as they've discontinued the OnePlus 3 and replaced it with the 3T. However, these upgrades do not come for free, and the price of the phone has increased by a significant amount to accommodate the upgrades.

For the components that are shared between the OnePlus 3 and OnePlus 3T, the experience and level of quality provided are equivalent between the two. The build quality is just as good, with the only change being the removal of the silver color and the introduction of gunmetal grey and gold finishes in its place. The display is essentially the same, although in my case I did see an even higher level of accuracy in the sRGB mode than I did on the OnePlus 3T, but it's impossible to say whether this is true of all units or if mine was just exceptionally good. The rear-facing camera quality is unchanged, although OnePlus advertises improved EIS during video recording. This is something that could easily be brought to the OnePlus 3 in a software update, so I'm unsure if it's really something that can be considered an advantage of the 3T. I also feel that the poor video quality on Snapdragon 820 devices means that it's not even worth discussing which ones have slightly better video quality than others.

The three aspects that have changed are the battery, the SoC, and the front-facing camera. For the battery the improvement is fairly obvious, with the 13% increase in capacity essentially giving you a corresponding 13% increase in battery life. Moving the SoC from MSM8996 to MSM8996 Pro makes the phone roughly 10% faster for CPU-bound tasks and 5% faster for GPU-bound tasks. These are fairly modest improvements, but it's important to also note that this is a high level perspective that doesn't take into account improvements in efficiency and fixes for errata that have been bundled into Snapdragon 821. Finally, you have the new front-facing camera which moves from an 8MP Sony sensor with 1.4µm pixels to a 16MP Samsung sensor with 1.0µm pixels.

With all these upgrades comes an increase in price from $399 to $439 in the United States, with corresponding increases in other currencies. $40 doesn't sound like an enormous amount of money on its own, but when a phone is initially priced at $399 it represents a price increase of 10%, which is not insignificant. The question is whether the improvements made in the OnePlus 3T are worth this 10% increase in price. This really comes down to the user and what they value in a device. For example, I didn't really touch on the front-facing camera because I think increasing the price of a phone to inflate the pixel count on the front-camera is not a good decision. I find myself asking how much cheaper the phone would be if it had retained the perfectly adequate 8MP camera from the OnePlus 3. The same is true for the SoC; Snapdragon 821 doesn't provide enough of an improvement in performance to justify increasing the price of the phone. The only change that actually does impact the user in a visible and meaningful way is the improved battery life.

All of that being said, I don't think the OnePlus 3T provides a poor value for the money. What's really in question here is whether the OnePlus 3 provided better value for its price. As I've used the phone and thought about the price I've been leaning toward that conclusion, as neither the SoC change nor the new front camera have meaningfully improved my experience, and the 13% larger battery is not worth $40 on its own. If you truly value having the best SoC and having more pixels in your selfies then the improvements may be worth a 10% increase in price for you, but for me I think it just pushes the price closer to the realm of flagship devices without much to show for it.

Ultimately, I still believe that the OnePlus 3T is a very good phone for the price, and it is a better phone than the OnePlus 3. However, if you were to offer me the OnePlus 3 and 3T at their original prices, I think I would just opt to get the OnePlus 3. I would definitely miss the longer battery life, but for me personally, the other changes don't add up to enough to justify the increase in price.

Software: OxygenOS 3.5.1
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  • arayoflight - Tuesday, November 29, 2016 - link

    Do you have any proof it's using UFS 2.1. Looks like regular UFS 2.0 with F2FS filesystem to me.

    To confirm that, I installed androbench on my Oneplus 3, set the parameters to what Anandtech uses(256 KB read for seq, 4KB for random and 1 I/O thread).

    Since my Oneplus 3 is running on F2FS too(OxygenOS 3.5.6 has it by default)

    Here are the results I got:

    Random Read: 21.35 MB/s
    Random Write: 25.21 MB/s
    Seq read: 264.23 MB/s
    Seq write: 140.4 MB/s

    These are almost exactly equal to the results from the 3T in the review. Hence, I think they are not using UFS 2.1 on the 3T.
  • Meteor2 - Tuesday, November 29, 2016 - link

    Indeed, I see no suggestion that UFS 2.1 is being used in the 3T.
  • andrewaggb - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    My top 3 for a smartphone are screen, cameras, battery life. This upgrade improves on 2 of them.
  • mgl888 - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    I wish the review tested the new front facing camera.
  • boeush - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    I agree with Brandon on the camera aspect: it would have been valuable to upgrade the rear camera; the front camera upgrade isn't really worth the money if the older model was already good-enough.
  • Mr Perfect - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    OnePlus gets a lot of love these days. I'd consider one, but the OS updating is a little hazy. What are the community builds people talk about? Does OnePlus make a release version, then open source it to the community to maintain? Are they talking about Nougat in any way?

    I was hoping they'd become the new Nexus, but it looks like they're not there yet.
  • JoeyJoJo123 - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    CyanogenMod supports OnePlus phones, and I'm sure OnePlus 3T will come very soon.

    If it's any reconciliation, my Nexus 4 is on CyanogenMod 13 (Android 6.0 - Marshmallow) even though Google chose to end support for the Nexus 4 before Marshmallow even came to the Nexus 4.
  • JoeyJoJo123 - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    Additionally:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CyanogenMod#Cyanogen...
    "The first experimental build of Cyanogenmod 14.1 based on Android 7.1 was released for Oneplus 3 device..."

    So even though OnePlus themselves haven't released a Nougat equivalent of OxygenOS, yet, CyanogenMod's been on the ball, and even sourced their newest OS to the OnePlus 3 first.

    There's really 3 major brands of phones that Cyanogenmod tends to support well today: Motorola, Samsung, and LG. Of those, only Motorola sometimes comes with an unlocked bootloader and root access. OnePlus phones come with that standard, as is usual with Nexus phones.

    In many ways, OnePlus supplanted the Nexus line. Alternatively there's a few Motorola phones that come with unlocked bootloaders (and are marketed as Developer editions), etc.
  • Mr Perfect - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    Good info, thanks. I was hoping OnePlus would be an all-in-one hardware and software solution like Nexus was, but throwing CyanogenMod on solid hardware is the next best thing.
  • UtilityMax - Wednesday, November 30, 2016 - link

    I don't get the obsession about frequent updates. To my humble eye, Lollipop, Marshmallow, and Nougat look almost the same. Nougat barely adds anything new, and Marshmallow was viewed as a bug-fix release to Lollipop. The Nexus device users were the first one to receive Nougat, but the sad reality is that Google is using them as beta testers.

    Regarding, Oneplus updates, based on my experience with Oneplus One, I think Oneplus updates were pretty honest. The device came out with KitKat, then got updated to Lollipop (after a lengthy delay), and then to Marshmallow. Not bad for a device that shipped with KitKat. My Samsung tablet got the same treatment, but a lot slower than Oneplus One.

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