A great affordable handset that feels more Oppo than OnePlus
OnePlus has changed a lot. The brand originally started out by releasing a single flagship phone a year sold at a substantially lower price to its more established competitors. Lately thatâs less true. It now has multiple flagship smartphones, like the OnePlus 9 and 9 Pro that are priced similarly to rivals from Samsung, and it also offers a lineup of around half a dozen mid-range and affordable smartphones under its Nord brand from its UK store.
At just ÂŁ299 (âŹ349) the OnePlus Nord CE 2 is about as affordable as the lineup gets in Europe. (The company says itâs not releasing this specific model in the US, where OnePlus sells a different lineup of Nord phones). The Nord CE 2 is pitched as a step down version of last yearâs Nord 2, where the âCEâ in its name stands for âCore Edition.â In other words, itâs a device focussed on the core essentials of a modern smartphone. That means good battery life, fast charging, a fast refresh-rate display, and good-enough cameras. Thereâs also a headphone jack. Bliss.
Thereâs another change thatâs been happening at OnePlus over the years. Itâs been growing ever closer to Oppo, another brand operated by parent company BBK Electronics. The result is that the OnePlus Nord CE 2 feels more like an Oppo phone than any other OnePlus device Iâve used. And yet, it also feels like the truest continuation of OnePlusâ original spirit: offering great performance at an affordable price point.
OnePlus has always had a close relationship with its sister brand Oppo, but historically thereâs been separation between the two, such as different branding for their similar fast-charging technologies. But with the OnePlus Nord CE 2 these differences have all but disappeared. Its fast-charging technology is now branded as SuperVOOC, the same as Oppo, and the whole device appears to be a slightly tweaked and rebranded Oppo Reno7. Itâs probably not a coincidence that this device follows reports that OnePlus is now effectively an Oppo sub-brand.
Does this matter? Not really. I donât care what branding my phoneâs fast-charging uses (OnePlus tells me the phone should still work with any OnePlus-branded Warp chargers youâve got lying around) and nor do I mind if this device has technically already been released under a different name. It doesnât change anything about the device in my hands.
The only major OnePlus feature I wish had made the cut is the companyâs traditional alert slider on the side of the phone, to let you easily put the phone into silent or vibrate modes. This slider was also missing from last yearâs Nord CE, so itâs not entirely a surprise, but I once again missed it during my time with the Nord CE 2.
Branding is less important than the specs you actually get, and on that front the OnePlus Nord CE 2 delivers. Itâs got a nice and bright 6.43-inch 1080p OLED display with a smooth 90Hz refresh rate, a long-lasting 4,500mAh battery that can be charged at a speedy 65W with a charger in the box, 5G support, and a headphone jack. Itâs available in blue or gray.
A headphone jack.
The overall construction of the phone feels lower tier than the specs it contains. Although its screen is Gorilla Glass 5, itâs got a plastic back and a plastic frame, and generally doesnât have a premium feel. But on the plus side, itâs thin and light enough to disappear into a relatively slim pocket. Thereâs also no official IP rating for dust and water resistance, although like previous OnePlus phones youâll probably still be fine using the phone in light rain.
Internally the Nord CE 2 is powered by a MediaTek Dimensity 900 processor, which in Europe is paired with 8GB of RAM and 128GB of internal storage (expandable with up to 1TB of microSD storage), both generous for this price point. Not using a chip from more popular manufacturer Qualcomm means you lose out on features like high-quality aptX Bluetooth streaming, but overall performance is otherwise consistent with what youâd expect from a phone at this price point. In other words, apps are generally smooth and slick, but I noticed some stuttering when I quickly switched between them.
Most importantly, MediaTekâs processor is able to keep up with the phoneâs 90Hz display, which like most OLED panels is also nice and colorful. My unit looked a little too blue out of the box, but I was able to adjust its color temperature in its settings. Sound is a more basic affair, with a single downward-facing mono speaker. It gets plenty loud, but doing so quickly distorts the sound of whatever youâre playing. Your music deserves better, but I think itâs fine for listening to a podcast while you cook (my partner, a podcast producer, disagrees).
The Nord CE 2âs battery life is great. I never put the phone on to charge at the end of the evening with less than 40 percent of battery remaining, and I averaged a little over 7 hours of screen-on time between charges. Charging from zero using the included 65W fast charger got me to 21 percent charge in just five minutes, which is remarkable for an affordable handset like this. It hit 57 percent in 15 minutes, and was basically fully charged (97 percent) in 35 minutes. You need to use the correct Oppo or OnePlus charger and cable to get these speeds, so itâs good to get one included in the box.
The SIM card tray, with space for two SIMs and a MicroSD card.
Aside from its cheaper-feeling construction, the single biggest downgrade with the OnePlus Nord CE 2 compared to the Nord 2 or a OnePlus flagship is its cameras. On paper, things look ok. The Nord CE 2 has a triple rear camera consisting of a main 64-megapixel sensor, an 8-megapixel ultrawide, and a 2-megapixel macro. Around front, thereâs a 16-megapixel selfie camera. (If youâre curious, this is the only major difference I could spot between the OnePlus Nord CE 2 and the Oppo Reno7, which has a 32-megapixel selfie camera.)
Give this camera system enough light, like when youâre outside in the daytime, and like most modern smartphones itâll do an excellent job. Objects are detailed, colors are accurate, and the overall system is nice and responsive. I even like how the software handles faces. It doesnât have that over-brightened look that previous Nord phones have suffered with.
But even when using binning techniques, which reduces images down to 16-megapixels by default, the OnePlus Nord CE 2 quickly loses detail in lower light. Rather than letting things get grainy, OnePlusâs software tries to smooth things over where possible, which can give faces that over-smooth plastic-y look. Look at the low-light photo of me above and youâll see all the definition from my stubble has disappeared. At least it doesnât look overly sharpened and processed.
Unsurprisingly the 8-megapixel ultrawide sensor is even lower quality, and struggles with detail even in bright light. The 2-megapixel macro just about lets you focus on close-up objects, but itâs so low resolution I didnât love any of the shots it produced. Iâll happily take it over a completely gimmicky monochrome sensor, but it canât match the genuine utility of something like a telephoto camera.
Three cameras, including an ultrawide and a macro.
Iâve already mentioned the blurring lines between the OnePlus and Oppo brands when it comes to their fast-charging brands, but the highest-profile example is in their software. OnePlus has announced itâs merging its own OxygenOS Android software, with Oppoâs ColorOS, and last yearâs Nord 2 reviewerâs guide specifically mentioned that its OxygenOS software was based on ColorOS 11.3. From what I can tell, the Nord CE 2âs software is similar, although its reviewersâ guide doesnât mention ColorOS, and I was unable to get a clear answer from the company about what underlying codebase the Nord CE 2 is using.
Again, none of this matters much in practice. In day-to-day usage, the OxygenOS-branded software does a decent job of offering a flexible operating system that doesnât get in the way. If you liked OnePlusâs approach to software before, then youâll probably like it on the Nord CE 2. However, itâs a shame that the phone has shipped with Android 11 rather than the newer Android 12, since this means the two years of promised Android updates are likely to only bring it to Android 13. As well as two years of Android updates, you also get three years of security updates, though OnePlus isnât committing to how often these will be. Thatâs not as good as the three years of OS updates HMD promised for the ÂŁ299 X20, the up to four years of updates Samsung now offers across its Galaxy devices, or the five years (and counting) Apple has provided for the original iPhone SE from 2016.
The phoneâs 90Hz OLED display is plenty colorful.
The OnePlus Nord CE 2 is the most Oppo-like OnePlus phone Iâve personally used. But at ÂŁ300(âŹ349), itâs hard to fault. It feels fast and responsive in everyday use, its screen is smooth and vibrant, its battery easily lasts over a day, and it charges ridiculously quickly when it runs dry. The big compromises here are the phoneâs overall build quality, which verges on feeling a little cheap and plastic-y, and a set of cameras that struggle to take decent shots away from bright daylight.
A lot has been written about how OnePlus has moved away from its roots in recent years and is no longer focused on offering flagship smartphones at a fraction of the price of its competitors. But with the Nord CE 2, it feels like itâs returned to this original promise. More than its recent flagships, the OnePlus Nord CE 2 feels like a true continuation of the OnePlus spirit of old. Itâs just ironic that itâs done so in a device that feels like an Oppo phone.
Photography by Jon Porter / The Verge