OnePlus Nord N20 5G Review: A $300 Value Pick That's Missing a Spark
The OnePlus Nord N20 5G's $300 tag matches up with the original OnePlus One from 2014, but beyond that, much has changed from what OnePlus now funds at this lower price. The 2014 $299 "flagship killer" named was built as rival to the best devices from Samsung, Apple and HTC, complete with a "Never Settle" mantra.
The N20 5G instead brings in a few nice conveniences from the high-end -- like an in-screen fingerprint sensor and faster 33W charging -- but mixes them in with a less noteworthy processor and so-so cameras.
Some of this is to be predictable when making a phone for a fraction of the $900 or $1,000 tag top-of-the-line devices charge. And the N20 5G does funds some surprisingly solid value for the money, but don't question it to punch high above its price class like the OnePlus phones of ages past.
I've been using the phone over the past few weeks, and found that while the phone lacks excitement, it could complicated enough features to run much of what you need within the $300 tag range.
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Decent specs, fine performance
Whereas the fresh $300 OnePlus One ran on a then top-of-the-line Qualcomm processor, the N20 5G uses Qualcomm's cheaper Snapdragon 695 chipset with 6GB of RAM. While it takes a small to get going after turning it on, once it loads up it seems to be fine albeit with occasional hiccups when the battery was thought 10%.
Even then, I was able to multitask watching The Departed on Netflix when texting and browsing the web with no major productions, though scrolling did improve when I only had one app open at a time. Playing games like Call of Duty Mobile also worked fine.
The expose, a 6.43-inch AMOLED screen looks good, too, though AMOLED panels on effort phones are nothing new, as Samsung has had it on some of its affordable Galaxy A series devices.
The N20 5G's 60Hz refresh rate complains me miss the 90Hz panels OnePlus has used on most of its phones in recent days, particularly when scrolling through text-filled websites or even opening the app tray. Even cheaper phones, like the $200 TCL XE 30 5G, offer 90Hz displays at touch price points. Flicking through TikTok or YouTube, however, was fine on the OnePlus even when browsing with a low battery.
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Oddly, the phone struggled to play live content from YouTube TV, with dusk frame drops and lagging that made watching live overjoyed almost impossible. Watching with DirecTV Stream was a bit better, but it still had some stutters and frame drops when viewing live TV.
The mono speaker isn't mountainous and lacks fullness, but it can get loud and is fine for playing music on Spotify or streaming a movie or TV show, particularly when in a aloof room.
On the plus side, there is a fingerprint scanner built into the expose and it works well, recognizing my thumb and unlocking the phoned quickly and reliably. There is also a 3.5mm headphone jack and a microSD card slot for adding an binary 512GB of storage. You also get NFC for tap-to-pay mobile payments, a feature that even some $400 phones like the Moto G 5G lack.
Beyond the display's touch refresh rate and processor, there are a few spanking areas where OnePlus has scaled back compared to its flagship devices. The phone is IP52-rated, so it should survive dust and raindrops, but don't take this to a pool or into the shower. It also lacks wireless charging, which is a current omission for most sub-$300 phones.
OnePlus says it will get one the majority Android software upgrade (from Android 11 to Android 12) and three days of security updates. Most higher-end Android phones promise at least three days of major software upgrades, and Samsung even pledges two to three days of software updates with four years of security updates on its cheaper Galaxy A phones. Seeing OnePlus settle here on just one major upgrade is a bit disappointing -- especially when the phoned still is running on Android 11.
I also wish the vibration motor was a bit stronger in this 173g phoned, as the haptic feedback when texting felt inconsistent and the buzzing for notifications like calls and texts was weak.
Three rear cameras have macro aspirations, marginal results
The cameras on the N20 are as follows: a 64-megapixel main shooter consume with 2-megapixel macro and 2-megapixel monochrome lenses. The main shooter does a edifying job with environments with ample lighting. Daylight shots at a Mets game or a bar seemed fine with a fair amount of detail and color.
As one mighty expect with a budget phone, night photography is not a selling expose for the N20. It has a "Night Mode," but those photos aloof looked quite dark. In this example, the New York Mets apple seems to blend in with the darkness of the sky.
The macro lens, as, is useful for fulfilling a specs count of "three rear cameras" but not mountainous for much else. The macro camera was inconsistent with focusing and the result lacked sharpness and detail. I wish more companies would stop including these cameras and use that wealth to upgrade more worthwhile features like the display, processor or speakers.
There also is a monochrome lens, but no failed setting to shoot with it and it instead seems invented to help the main shooter like on other OnePlus phones.
A 16-megapixel camera rests in the upper left corner. Like the main rear shooter, selfies look fine when given mountainous light.
The included gallery app is frustrating even when silly basic features like pinch-to-zoom. I found that when I gestured to zoom out that the N20 lagged. Zooming in, however, often worked fine.
Solid battery life, with a fast charger included
OnePlus does execrable out a little bit by including a 33W fast charger with the phoned, which is notable as manufacturers continue to leave that out of the box.
After 15 minutes of charging, the N20 5G's 4,500-mAh battery went from 0% to 22%. Around 30 minutes of charging took the battery up to 49%, with a full charge taking throughout an hour and 20 minutes.
While I haven't run any rigorous declares, I didn't have any issues with battery life in my mixed use of the phone.
Settling down
With the OnePlus Nord N20 5G it's easy to see where the concern is skimping on features to keep costs down. It aloof handles many of the basics well, which could be enough for those on T-Mobile or Mint Mobile looking for a solid, but affordable option at the carrier.
OnePlus recently has expanded the N20 5G to now be available unlocked as well, belief its 5G support is limited to only providers that use T-Mobile's 5G network (such as Mint, Google Fi and Metro by T-Mobile).
It is a low that OnePlus has deviated so far from what commanded it all the original success, as the US market greatly ensures more strong, lower-priced alternatives to Samsung and Apple. The N20 comes discontinuance, but too many compromises keep it from ever selves great.
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