APC Australia

Oppo Reno 5G phone

Cutting edge, future-ready and relatively affordable.

- Harry Domanski

Ever one for classy designs, Oppo’s latest handset is truly stunning. The Reno 5G sports an iridescent, yet predominan­tly matte finish on its rear – a welcome aesthetic and tactile change to all the high-gloss that arrived on flagship phones with the introducti­on of glass bodies. A clever addition to the phone’s back is a small bump (dubbed the ‘O-Dot’) that effectivel­y raises your phone from a flat surface to avoid damaging the cameras and sensors that are flush with the handset’s rear.

Flip the phone over and you’ll immediatel­y notice how dazzling the display is as well. Measuring 6.6-inches and fitting in an impressive 2,340 x 1,080 pixels, this AMOLED wonder offers plenty of vivid colours and detail. While there is a tiny bezel that surrounds all four edges (a slightly larger one for the chin), the lack of notch or pinhole camera makes for

an impressive­ly uninterrup­ted viewing and gaming experience, enabling it to achieve a stellar 93.1% screen-to-body ratio.

The reason this handset is able to maintain such a sleek facade is due to its novel and genius pop-up camera. Oppo isn’t new to this, with the Find X first debuting this flavour of wizardry, but the shark-fin design we see with this generation of smartphone­s is certainly a refinement on the feature. The selfie camera is quite a capable shooter, and paired with portrait modes and Oppo’s penchant for beautifica­tion, it’ll be more than enough. As for the main snapper, this version of Oppo’s flagship has inherited its non-5G counterpar­t’s star feature – 10x optical zoom – and when paired with all the powerful shooting modes, makes for a really deep and pretty camera.

Its powerful Snapdragon 855 and 8GB RAM combo is more than capable of breezing through the latest games and day-to-day tasks. Thanks to Oppo’s VOOC technology, the massive 4,065mAh battery charges up incredibly fast and comfortabl­y manages more than a day’s worth of heavy usage. While Oppo’s ColorOS isn’t necessaril­y as appealing as some other major players’, it’s certainly improved over the years and is more than palatable by this stage.

While the 5G competitio­n is thin at present, this flagship from Oppo is the most affordable 5G-enabled device on the Australian market, with its $1,499 asking price falling comfortabl­y below the $1,729 of the LG V50 ThinQ 5G and the anticipate­d $2,000 ballpark for the Samsung Galaxy S10 5G. At the time of writing, 5G availabili­ty was rather patchy in Sydney, although even in areas that weren’t technicall­y marked by Telstra as having coverage, download speeds were noticeably quicker (getting up to 200Mbps in some CBD areas according to Speedtest, compared with the 40-60Mbps typically expected of 4G).

Although having 5G capabiliti­es might prove itself useful over the course of the next year, by that point the number of compatible smartphone­s on the market will have also increased. You could spend $300 less and get an identical handset minus the 5G functional­ity – a much more compelling propositio­n for the majority of users – but if you’d like to ready yourself for the future and are fine with being an early adopter, the Oppo Reno 5G is an excellent way to buy into all the latest smartphone features at a discount.

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