Handsome, minimalist design, Vanishingly small and light for a 5-inch phone, Oxygen OS is an attractive take on Android
Slippery to hold, No fingerprint reader or NFC, Mediocre camera, Lacks proper LTE support in United States
More times than not, the Verge score is based on the average of the subscores below. However, since this is a non-weighted average, we reserve the right to tweak the overall score if we feel it doesn't reflect our overall assessment and price of the produ...
I'm beyond impressed with this phone. You won't get a fingerprint sensor like the OnePlus Two, and it has slightly lower specs, but the ability to add expandable storage is a huge plus. Overall, it feels like a flagship smartphone with a super low price...
Abstract: While there is no shortage of premium flagship smartphones out there, this year has also seen a larger focus on affordability without a compromise in quality. Two smartphones that fall in this ever-growing category are the Nexus 5X and the OnePlus X .In t...
The inexpensive OnePlus X is fast, beautifully designed and has some nifty customizable features
The glossy handset is slippery and has limited compatibility with key LTE bands in the US
The OnePlus X is one of the best budget phones of the year, but its limited LTE support make it a crapshoot for US customers who want high-speed data...
Published: 2015-12-07, Author: Daniel , review by: notebookcheck.net
stylish design, fast SoC, expandable storage, decent speaker, good battery life
sleek surface, card tray stiff-running with card, no USB Type C, no NFC, sluggish micro-SD slot, no 64 bit SoC
OnePlus' X is actually a well-configured mid-range smartphone at a fair price. However, it is combined with a bitter aftertaste seeing that the former OnePlus One high-end smartphone is superior to the X model in all aspects but its 64 GB version only cos...
Fetching design, Smooth performance, Nearstock Android, spiced up with a few useful tweaks,
Fingerprint magnet and slippery, Nonbacklit navigation keys, Average camera
The OnePlus X is priced at Rs 16,999, and can only be bought if you have an invite… which means you can't buy it outright as and when you want. For us, the camera quality and the iffy proximity sensor were the key pain points, but otherwise, we think the...
Fantastic looks and materials for the price. Pleasing full HD AMOLED display. Low price
Unabashed iPhone 5 clone, lean selection of 4G LTE bands, single band WiFi and no NFC
The OnePlus X faces competition not only from the OnePlus 2 (just $70 more) but the very likeable and good Moto G 3rd edition. There are of course other budget choices like the Alcatel OneTouch Idol 3 (not quite as pretty but more LTE bands and a bigger s...
Outstanding design, Responsive and nononsense UI, Good value for money, Dual SIM functionality, Camera is very fast and takes goodenough photos in good light, Bundled with a screen protector and a case
Even games that are not very demanding are choppy, The display's color accuracy is poor, You'd normally need an invitation to buy the phone, Poorly designed physical and capacitive buttons, Earpiece sound quality is disappointing, Mediocre loudspeaker qua
Prior to having the chance to use the OnePlus X as a daily driver, we were genuinely excited about this phone. It seemed like a killer mid-range offering – one with great design, decent specs, no-nonsense UI, and, above all, a very tempting price tag. Per...
Abstract: There has been an on-off trend by smartphone makers to release “mini” versions of their flagship handsets, in years gone by Samsung always had a “mini” version of its latest “S” device. However Samsung isn't the only one playing the “mini” game. After the...