OnePlus 12 Review: Better Than You Think!

Edward Elon
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(smooth music) - All right, now that

we're back down to Earth after all of that Vision Pro launch stuff, I've had a chance to go back and re-pick up some of the things that I was testing that got, like, interrupted by that week of chaos, and there is some really good stuff. The OPPO Find X7 Ultra design I really like more than I expected. The Zenbook Duo, the full screen, 


 Dual screen laptop for

2024, is kind of sick. And there's some other stuff

that is better than expected. But the one that stood out to

me maybe the most of them all is this guy right here, the OnePlus 12. This may have flown a

little bit under the radar, I mean, with everything

that's been going on, but it's gotten some

improvements from last year, and it is priced very competitively. Matter of fact, let's

just start with that. 799. And you also get a free

upgrade to the 16 gigs of RAM, half terabyte model for

that price if you pre-order. It's literally already marked

down to that on Amazon, 


 So I'll have a link below. Flagship price, yes, but when it's competing

theoretically against some of the ultra phones, 1,000, 1,200, $1,300, then suddenly, it's

kind of in the category of, uh, dare I say, flagship killer? So look, it's nearly

the same on the outside. They found what they like and

they're keeping it consistent. Same shapes, same camera bump circle that kind of melts into the side with these neural details around it. It's still Gorilla Glass 5 on the back, 


 And there's a new set

of colors and textures, but in general, you'd

be forgiven for thinking it's nearly the same as last year. Or maybe you wouldn't, but

don't let that fool you. Upfront, this screen

is I think the biggest noticeable physical

difference from last year. It gets way brighter, up

to 1,600 nits outdoors, and it's hitting crazy numbers now. 4,500 nits peak HDR brightness. Basically, it's super impressive and extremely readable

outdoors and in any light. But it also gets extremely dim too. 


 Now, I don't like that it's

this curved over the edges, like, you can see the light fall off and the extra reflections

that come with that, but basically, from corner

to corner, this 6.8 inch, 1440p LTPO Pro XDR display is a real upgrade over last year. So then the rest of the

upgrades to this phone are definitely a case of a

bunch of little changes all, like, stacking up on top of each other to equal a large

difference from last year. Does that make sense? Like, that's what

smartphones are nowadays. 


 I remember reviewing the OnePlus 1 and then the OnePlus 2 the next year, and just the gigantic total shift, big direction changes

between those two phones. Nowadays, it's just about, like, finding a bunch of clever little things and stacking a bunch of

little improvements on top of each other, just make the user

experience a little better. So obviously, if you're

gonna be a flagship killer, you gotta have the newest chip inside. So it does, it's the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3. Not that you'll notice a

whole ton of difference 


 Side by side with a

Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 phone, but this phone does have

much better cooling as well, so it's giving them some

headroom to play with slightly boosted clock speeds, and it's benchmarking right behind the gaming phones and the S24 Ultra. In real world use, that just

means this phone is super fast, really, really fluid, it's

a smooth phone all the time. Like, this is something OnePlus has done really well for a long time, even with high performance mode being off in the battery settings by default. 


 But speaking of battery, this phone is definitely prioritizing battery, super long battery life, over, like, ultra high end performance numbers and getting every last

FPS out of the thing, and as a result, this is a battery champ. First of all, you just

start with a huge capacity. So it's got one of the

biggest batteries ever in a OnePlus flagship. It's now a 5,400 milliamp hour battery. That's bigger than a lot of other phones that are ultras now. 


 And you better believe

they've kept their trademarked Super Fast Charging also. So, it's technically a split battery, it's dual 2,700 milliamp hours. and it can juice up at 80 watts wired. This combination of huge

battery, awesome battery life, prioritization of battery length, and ultra fast charging

honestly makes this at least a contender to

think about right now for battery champ of the year. Matter of fact, if you

just leave this phone and all of its out the box settings, 


 Meaning not in high performance mode, just regular performance mode by default, 1080p, which it is out the box, and then just auto frame rate, you can get two full light

days out of this phone. And then when you finally

do get down to near zero, you can charge up to half

battery in like 12 minutes. If you wanna go all the way full, that's only gonna take about half an hour. It's just so easy. And on top of all of that, there is up to 50 watt wireless charging. 


 So if you've got a

compatible air booth charger, you obviously have to buy that separately, but the OnePlus 11 didn't

even have wireless charging at all, so this is a gigantic improvement. I almost wanna get greedy

and also wish that there was Qi2 support for wireless charging, but I don't know about you, but Qi2 has felt like it's off to a weird, rocky start,

especially this year. It's been surprisingly

uncommon for any phones to support Qi2 with the

magnets and wireless charging. This is likely because there seems to be 


 A 15 watt charging limit with Qi2 for now, so if you wanna do fast wireless charging, you aren't doing Qi2. So yeah, no Qi2 wireless, no magnets, but very, very fast charging. Either way, way better display,

better chip, better battery, and also now the cameras

have gotten an upgrade. Now, I'm just gonna say, cameras have been a relatively weak point for OnePlus's highest end

phones for a while now. We've always wanted to

call them flagship killers, but people love cameras

in flagship phones, 


 And it just hasn't quite been able to match that highest level. I'd say now it's on the

acceptable for a flagship level, but it's not quite beating those yet, and that's still true about this phone. Now, this main sensor, it is actually very slightly different. Instead of the OnePlus

Opens's Sony LYT-T808 sensor is the LYT-808 sensor. It's two more megapixels,

it's slightly wider aperture with the glass in front of it. Nevertheless, basically,

these OnePlus 12 photos 


 Aren't going to shock you. I've done some side by side comparisons. I've even said this before, it's pretty good most of the time. It's pretty sharp. It's a little contrastier

than the OnePlus Open. The HDR effect looks fine. It just falls apart a little too quickly as soon as there's adverse

conditions, especially low light. But here's the thing,

just for the context of that it's not that far behind,

we've already tested this, because we did the blind

smartphone camera test last year 


 With 20 of the best smartphone

cameras in the world, and in that test was the OnePlus Open. So yeah, there's a lot

of software involved with these cameras, but basically, this extremely similar camera system, in the standard light photo, it had the third highest ELO

rating behind the two pixels. Then in portrait mode, it was also top 10. But in low light, it was

fifth from the bottom, right around the Sony and below the Razr. So in summary, yeah, the

camera system is new, it does have new hardware, it

has a new zoom and everything, 


 But all together, it is just like a lot of the other stuff I'm showing you, a little bit better than last year. And that's gonna be good

enough for a lot of people. Actually, most people most of the time. But if we wanna consider

it flagship, it's just, there is a little bit of a

gap till it reaches the best. But I'll tell you what, they

even more keep stacking it up. There are so many little

things about using this OnePlus phone that I really like. Like, I love that I can

specifically force any app I want to be at whatever frame rate I want. 


 Like, there's literally a

list of every single app on my phone, and by default,

you've probably noticed, all of the mapping apps,

like Waze and Google Maps, they always, even on every

other 120 hertz phone, they always override and run at 60 hertz. But on this phone, I can just fix it. Just give me all of the frames, please. I also love that this phone

has an infrared blaster. One of the least common

features in the world of a modern smartphone alongside,

like, a headphone jack. But yeah, it literally

lets you turn on and off and control appliances remotely 


 Without having to find the

remote, like this TV here, or a stranger's TV, I don't know. It's the little things. I love that this USB-C port

not only supports basically the fastest charging we've

ever seen on a phone in the US, but also supports extremely

fast data transfer speeds. This is a USB 3.2 Gen 1 port. The names and generations

are horrible at this point and incredibly confusing. All you really need to know

is that this has basically the best data speeds

available from a USB-C phone. So if you get the right cable, 


 You can get large files, like videos, on and off of the device real quick. And then a lot of you will probably love that this new screen

supports high PWM dimming. If you've never heard of this before, it might not even matter to you, but there is a select

fraction of the population that is specifically

sensitive to the flickering that becomes visible

at super low brightness with a lot of these

smartphone OLED displays, to the point where,

like, it causes headaches and eye fatigue. 


 So, some smartphones, including this one, are now addressing it with super high pulse-width modulation. Basically, they still flicker on and off to get that lower perceived brightness, but much, much faster than

the human eye can perceive, 2,160 hertz in this phone's case. So, it still appears liquid smooth at all brightness

levels, which is awesome. If you use your phone in

the rain or when it's wet, you probably already know

how chaotic that feels. Like, there's memes about it. 


 Like, it just seems to

kind of act on its own when there's water droplets on the screen. But this phone claims that with a new technology called Aqua Touch, it will totally remain as usable as ever, even with water all over the screen. Now, you might have seen the ads for it. It might sound ridiculous,

but it actually works. It's not perfect, obviously,

but you can definitely feel that it's dramatically more responsive, to the point where I

can actually type things on this wet phone screen,

where I just would not 


 Wanna do that on any

other phone without this. Kind of feels like magic.

I am very impressed. And then there's even just

extra little tiny things on top of that, like 12

or 16 gigs of fast RAM. That's sick. Future-proof. Also, Dolby Atmos with

spatial audio support. Great. It also has great haptics. Like, all this tiny stuff adds up to be a great overall experience. But it's not perfect, right? Let's be real. No phone is perfect. But at least I can say about this phone 


 That also the downsides are

also a couple small things. Like, I, for one, I've

already talked about this, but I'm kind of over the curved displays, so, this one keeping that,

it's not a deal breaker, like, you might even argue

it's a little more character to this phone in the

world of 2024 smartphones, but it definitely has its downsides. from the glare to the light fall off to the drop test durability. But okay, fine, they've gone curved. But then the fingerprint sensor underneath is also still a pretty

average optical sensor. 


 Doesn't feel like it's

been upgraded in years. And then for having the new

Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chip inside, which a lot of other flagships do, this phone doesn't really have any of the AI features, like, at all, and this is something I

wanted to keep an eye on with all these phones coming out with this chip early in

this year, which is, okay, Qualcomm puts out a new chip,

small performance gains, small efficiency gains, but

also huge new AI capabilities, and this phone kind of

just skipped the AI part. Now, not that that's a disaster, 


 But those were some

genuinely useful features. The only one I found on this

phone is in the photo editor, and it's called AI Palettes, but it's just like a color overlay. I don't even really think there's that much AI going on with this at all. So, none of that generative

fill, crop correction, none of that Magic Editor stuff, none of that auto live

transcription of phone calls or live translation of phone calls, none of that, like, speaker

labels in the voice app, none of the auto summaries in the browser 


 Or anything like that, just none of it. It's not on this phone. And then also, random bug. I don't know, but every time

I'm in the overlay browser and I reach up to my

favorite little alert slider on the OnePlus phone and change modes, it opens a search box,

like, to find in page. I don't know why, they

shouldn't be connected, but it does it every single time. But maybe the biggest legitimate

downside of this phone when you're comparing it

to the other flagships it's going up against is it's promised 


 Fewer years of software update support. Now, I've already gotten a

pretty major software update since I started testing this phone, big camera improvements and bug fixes, stuff like that, great, but they are only

promising, only promising, four years of software updates and five years of security updates. Now, that's fine, a lot of

people will only plan on keeping this phone for

three or four years, maybe five years before

moving on to the next one, but in the world of the

flagships, the Pixels, 


 The Samsungs of the

world, even the iPhones giving you six or seven

years of software updates, this is just notably behind on that. And maybe OnePlus didn't

think it was worth the extra resources, it doesn't think people

care that much about it to actually spend money on

it to put the resources in, but yeah, four or five versus seven. So, is this a flagship killer? Well, that just depends on your definition of a flagship, doesn't it? I think this is probably

the most compelling thing 


 About this phone, is going to be how competitively priced it is, because it's very similar

in a lot of ways to, let's call it S24 Ultra, right? But I've seen this phone,

the 16 gigs of RAM, half terabyte version,

for 899 on their site. But if you pre-order it,

you can get that for 799. But they're also advertising

it in a lot of places for 699, because they're apparently

just giving you 100 bucks for a trade-in of any

phone, in any condition. So, if you're going with 699 and this phone starts at 1,300 bucks, 


 Then yeah, that is a damn good deal. So yeah, I'd just be looking

at what's important to you. I would say if camera is

really important to you, or if long-term software support is actually super high on your list, or if any of those AI features

looked really compelling or really interesting

that you'd want them, then you'd probably end up going with one of those other flagships. But for everything else,

like, for performance, for a great screen,

for incredible battery, super fast charging, ultra smooth, 


 Like, this phone is better

than you probably think. Oh, and on top of all that, OnePlus also around the same time has

released this phone right here. It looks almost the same,

but this is the OnePlus 12R. And this is just a a

budgetedized, budgetized? A budget version even more

so than this phone already, just basically cutting a few corners. A few corners on the camera, right? It's a Snapdragon 8 Gen

2 instead of the Gen 3. There's no wireless

charging, things like that. It's IP64 instead of IP65, whatever. It's a slightly trimmed down version. 


 Again, 500 bucks. I'm just saying. So, if these phones weren't

already on your radar, they probably should be. Thanks for watching, catch

you guys in the next one. Peace. (smooth music) 

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