This is the best summary I could come up with:
OnePlus is making a lot of noise about its design, which is meant to catch the light like a CD, and there’s a gap between the lenses and cover glass that’s supposed to remind you of the face on a luxury watch.
The telephoto lens offers a 6x lossless crop zoom mode, which is — again — just fine if your subject isn’t moving but struggles with motion.
I took some pictures from the stands at an NHL game, and it couldn’t manage a sharp shot of any of the players as they took the ice, even though they were illuminated with a bright white spotlight.
Video recording with the main camera tops out at 4K 30 / 60p, but you’ll need to drop down to 1080p to use the more robust stabilization mode, which does a good job of smoothing out jerky motion from walking.
The OnePlus Open gets a lot right, but it’s hard to recommend when an extra $100 will get you better water resistance, wireless charging, and — in the case of the Galaxy Z Fold 5 — a more mature foldable software experience.
The Open stands to make OnePlus fans who have been hoping for a folding phone quite happy — at least those who are sticking around in the company’s Oppo-ified era.
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