Display

At this point, it's hard to excuse shipping a smartphone without a great display. Not just great in terms of resolution, contrast, and brightness, but also great in terms of color accuracy. We've seen even inexpensive smartphones like the Moto G and the Lumia 640 achieve levels of color accuracy that weren't achieved even by many flagship smartphones only a few years ago. As for OnePlus, the OnePlus One was notable for bringing a very accurate and high resolution display to a low price point, and at the time it was one of the best displays you could get on a smartphone. With that being achieved by their very first smartphone, OnePlus has some big shoes to fill with its follow up.

To analyze the quality of a smartphone's display we run it through our custom display workflow which measures accuracy relative to the sRGB color space. Measurements are performed with an i1Pro 2 spectrophotometer, with the exception of contrast measurements which are done with an i1Display Pro colorimeter. Data is collected and organized using SpectraCal's CalMAN 5 software.

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

Out of the box, things look promising for the OnePlus 2. The display can get quite bright, and despite that it can also get quite dark, which leads to it achieving the best contrast ratio on record for an LCD device.

Display - White Point

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

Unfortunately, there's not much good news beyond high brightness and deep blacks. Greyscale accuracy on the OnePlus 2 is extremely poor. Right out of the gate, there's a large imbalance between the red and blue components that make up the shades of grey, and that gap grows increasingly large as you move toward white. The gamma is also quite a disaster, with a high degree of irregularity. Honestly I don't really know what to say, as this result is quite shocking when one looks back at how accurate the OnePlus One was. The OnePlus 2 is simply too blue, and even without the blue shift the highly irregular gamma will cause issues with both greyscale and color mixture rendition.

Display - Saturation Accuracy

Moving on to the saturation sweep test, the OnePlus 2 again performs poorly. Every primary and secondary color with the exception of blue has a high degree of error, particularly red, magenta, and cyan. While in this test the phone narrowly avoids being the worst result on the chart, it's not very far off, and can hardly be called accurate. There's clear saturation compression occurring, with OnePlus managing to be accurate for more of the 100% saturation values, but being undersaturated for most values below that.

Display - GMB Accuracy

With poor greyscale accuracy, irregular gamma, and inaccurate rendition of primary and secondary colors, there's no hope for accurate color mixtures on the OnePlus 2's display. There's really not much more to be said. We're not talking about the kind of inaccuracy that you'd get from an oversaturated panel, but instead just general inaccuracy where no color is quite how it should be. It seems like OnePlus just focused on making sure the panel matched the sRGB gamut and put no effort into any further calibration.

The display quality of the OnePlus 2 is not impressive at all. For a $400 phone this is simply unacceptable, and it's such an enormous regression from the OnePlus One. What's even more problematic is how OnePlus keeps tweaking the display settings with their updates, and you never know whether it's going to change for the better or for the worse. I've seen the gamma curve change significantly, but the overall accuracy didn't improve for the better because some aspects improved and others got worse. In any case, I don't know what happened when OnePlus was deciding upon the display attributes they would be targeting, but as far as being accurate to the Rec. 709 standard goes the OnePlus 2 is actually one of the worst devices on record, and I'm at a loss as to how to explain why they allowed it to fall so far behind the original.

Battery Life, Charging, WiFi Camera
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  • podspi - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    ...why? Blows my mind you'd review the OnePlus Two and not the flagship Windows Phone device...
  • ABR - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    Also mystified by this decision. Why review obscure niche phones most people will never see and whose only remarkable feature is their price, while ignoring a mainstream player that brings major innovation to the table?
  • faizoff - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    I can only hope and think they meant that they won't review the 950 but will review the XL. One can hope...But like Brandon mentioned in another comment, MS didn't send out a sample lumia to them.
  • ArKritz - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    Wow, all the four people actually using windows in one thread. What are the odds? :p
  • blzd - Friday, January 1, 2016 - link

    One Plus One sold over 2 million devices. 950 XL won't sell that many units, especially without the help of carriers.

    How many people are willing to splash iPhone money for a Windows Phone that gets out specced by a cheaper Nexus device? Very few.
  • zeeBomb - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Brandon, is this using the marginally newer 810 v2.1 chipset?
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Only the G Flex 2 and what seems to be early units of the One M9 use the 2.0 revision.
  • zeeBomb - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    I heard a while ago the HTC CEO or someone stated now current released models will use the 810 v2.1. Can't confirm tho. To LG, yeah that phone is the only one with v2. In regards to one plus 2:

    https://forums.oneplus.net/threads/oneplus-2-cpu-q...
  • knights - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    yes it is.
    https://forums.oneplus.net/threads/oneplus-2-cpu-q...
  • forgot2yield28 - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Agreed. I really want to know how the Moto X Pure stacks up against the N5X. For whatever reason, the writers here have never to my knowledge even commented on the lack of a Moto X Pure review, either to say it's coming or that they don't have a review unit and aren't going to publish a review.

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