![]() ![]() Similarly, the camera app appears to be Oppo's too. This is to be expected, now that the two companies have joined their software and R&D teams. The settings menu looks much more similar to Oppo's ColorOS, and OnePlus Switch has been dropped in favour of a Oppo's Clone Phone app (albeit with OnePlus' red and black colours). On the software side, there are hints within the latest version of Oxygen OS that show the influence of Oppo. ![]() Plus, it's flanked by stereo front-firing speakers to add a bit more depth to sound. It doesn't quite get up to the peak brightness levels of the 9 and 9 Pro, but it's more than good enough for daily use and media consumption. On the whole, for gaming and movie watching, the panel is great (well, once it's out of its vivid mode). That means it'll only kick into those higher frames-per-second numbers when it needs, so doesn't waste power when you're watching 25/30fps videos, or reading a static page. That's not the most impressive thing about its refresh though, it also features adaptive refresh tech. The 90Hz refresh rate means that animations are fluid and responsive on screen. ![]() It skews a bit towards green, depending on the angle. When looking at mostly white screens - like settings menu or Google Play's update list - from an angle, there's some colour shift. Instead, you get those two mode choices and a slider to adjust colour temperature. Unlike previous versions of the Oxygen OS software, The Nord 2 doesn't let you get down into the nitty-gritty of calibration. If we're being critical, we found in its default 'Vivid' mode that it over-egged the colours blues, reds and oranges all become very oversaturated and unrealistic. This became less of an issue when we switched the screen calibration to its 'Gentle' mode, making it appear a lot more clean and natural. ![]()
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