Oppo F1s review
Introduction
Oppo has always had its own way
of standing out among the growing crowds of Chinese phone manufacturers and
judging by sales reports and fan approval, the OEM seems to be doing at least
something right.
The F-series of affordable,
camera-centric devices has played a vital part in this success formula since
the beginning of 2016. The Oppo F1, the original "selfie-expert",
managed to appeal to a surprisingly broad user base. Its obvious selling-point
aside, the F1 proved to be a quite decent all-round mid-ranger with fast
performance, great build quality, excellent display and nicely sounding
speaker.
But it was the F1 Plus, the
follow-up that came a couple of months later, that really got the series
popular. It ushered in a design change and addressed many of the weak points of
its predecessor, with additions like a bigger, 1080p AMOLED panel, MediaTek
Helio P10 SoC, 4GB of RAM and an even better 13MP selfie shooter. Naturally,
the price point was changed as well, almost doubling the $250 or so asking
price for its predecessor. Despite the price hike, however, the F1 Plus sold
quite well helped by a successful marketing campaign. At one point Oppo even
claimed it is shipping an R9 unit (its model name in China) every 1.1 seconds
for a total of over 7 million about two months ago.
With such numbers, it is only
natural for the Chinese OEM to do the best it can to keep the ball rolling.
Enter the F1s. It is a rather controversial step that could either make or
break Oppo's next few quarters. Instead of leaning on the popularity of the F1
Plus formula, Oppo apparently decided to bring its prices back down again and
re-focus on the budget segment. This has resulted in a device that is in the
original F1 price league with a $270-ish price tag, but also way too close to
it specs-wise for anyone looking for an upgrade.
Key Features:
- Beefed-up selfie camera: 16MP 1/2.0" sensor, 1/3.1" sensor size
- 154.5 x 76 x 7.4 mm, 160g body
- 5.5" 720 x 1,080px LCD with 267 ppi; 2.5D scratch-resistant glass
- ColorOS V3.0.0i , based on Android 5.1 Lollipop
- Very quick and accurate fingerprint reader in the home button
- MediaTek MT6750 chipset, octa-core 1.5GHz Cortex-A53 CPU; Mali-T860MP2 GPU; 3GB RAM
- 13MP, f/2.2 camera with 1/3" sensor; 1080p@30fps video recording and phase detection autofocus; Single LED flash
- 32GB of built-in storage and a dedicated microSD card slot
- Dual-SIM connectivity
- LTE Cat.6 (300Mbps); Wi-Fi a/b/g/n; A-GPS/GLONASS receiver, Bluetooth v4.0, FM radio with RDS
- Active noise cancellation with a dedicated mic
- 3,075mAh non-removable battery
Main shortcomings:
- No OIS
- No VOOC fast charging support
It looks like Oppo tried to make
a cheaper version of the F1 Plus, but they might have just gone a step too far
in slimming down the specs of their new proposal. What this means is that
performance-wise, the F1s positions itself dangerously close to the original
"Selfie expert," which is far from ideal when you are spending close
to $300.
This all sounds quite gloomy, but
at least the stylish and slick new Oppo exterior is still present in the F1s.
Follow along in the next section for a more in-depth look.