“What phone should I get?” is not a question I hear as often as I used to. Most people have long since committed to an iPhone or a Galaxy, and anyone with a Nexus doesn't need my help. But a friend had just shattered his Moto G screen and wanted a cheap, good-enough Android phone. His timing was providential, as I happened to be testing a OnePlus 3.
The OnePlus 3 is the fourth phone—and third flagship—from OnePlus, an upstart company from China. Two years ago, the OnePlus One redefined the expectations for a cheap phone. It was excellent, and so was the OnePlus 2, even with the iffy camera and questionable product choices. Those phones, like the OnePlus 3, attempted to answer the question: What’s the best phone you can make for cheap?
You can make a compelling argument that the $400 OnePlus 3 is the answer. It stuffs amazing specs (6GB of RAM? sure!) in an iPhone-thin body. It atones for the sins of the OnePlus 2 by improving the camera and including NFC. It’s a very good phone at any price, and best of all, OnePlus finally ditched its labyrinthine invite system. You just buy one. Imagine that!
Still, I found myself occasionally wishing that OnePlus had eased back the throttle just a bit. Muscle cars make a great first impression, but they can be tricky daily drivers.
Let’s start with the good, though. The OnePlus 3 is a spec horse, with that 6GB of RAM, a muscular Snapdragon 820 processor, and 64GB of storage. That power pushes pixels on a 5.5-inch, 1080p AMOLED display with a whisper of a bezel. It offers all the advantages of AMOLED—colors are rich, blacks are inky—but and some of the disadvantages, the biggest being it lacks the brightness of a comparable LCD display. Still, that's only a problem in the brightest sunlight, and even then everything remains legible.
And can you really complain when AMOLED displays are more efficient, and the OnePlus 3 easily makes it through a full day of moderate use without topping off? The USB-C port and a feature called Dash Charge gets you a little more than half full in about 30 minutes. Fast-charging is a blessing bestowed upon humanity by the gods. The OnePlus 3 doesn’t offer wireless charging, but there’s not much reason to until all the competing standards find a way to play nice.
It’s also just a nicely designed phone. It's nothing fancy, basically "recent HTC on a diet" But the aluminum alloy body belies its price. It’s thin, but sturdy. People aren’t going to compliment you on how striking your smartphone is, but then, it’d be weird if they did.
