Itās a likable device, but OnePlus still has some work to do
The 10 Pro is OnePlus all grown up. The days of a scrappy upstart challenger are gone ā that much was clear with last yearās 9 and 9 Pro, with true flagship specs and prices to match.
This year, OnePlus has sharpened its vision of a legitimate flagship phone to challenge the big brands, and the result is a sophisticated, sleek device. Itās not just a cheaper flagship; itās a real alternative to Samsung and Google, with an identity all its own.
Thatās not to say that OnePlus has entirely closed the gap between itself and the big Android brands. The 10 Proās $899 price makes more sense than last yearās $1,069 9 Pro. (There was a less expensive version, but it never came to the US.) But at the same price, there are good reasons to consider the Pixel 6 Pro or the $999 Galaxy S22 Plus over the 10 Pro. OnePlus has some work to do to catch up to those competitors in the camera department, for one. And it still hasnāt worked things out with AT&T, so thereās no support for that carrierās 5G network ā just 4G.
Those are some major considerations, and they keep me from freely recommending the 10 Pro to just anyone looking for a premium Android phone. But Iām encouraged by the direction the company is taking with the 10 Pro, and if this is indeed the new OnePlus, I like where itās headed.
The 10 Proās 6.7-inch screen is a little taller than the competition and offers a fast 120Hz refresh rate.
With a 6.7-inch screen, the OnePlus 10 Pro is no doubt a big phone. It features a 1440p LTPO OLED panel thatās gently curved on the long edges. Its 20:9 aspect ratio is a hair taller than the S22 Plus and Pixel 6 Proās displays, and it matches their top refresh rate of 120Hz. Side by side, I can see that the display doesnāt get quite as searingly bright as the Galaxy S22 Plusā when theyāre both exposed to direct sunlight, but itās bright enough to use comfortably, even outdoors.
The 10 Pro features an aluminum frame along with Gorilla Glass Victus on the front and Gorilla Glass 5 on the back panel. OnePlus took a page out of Samsungās book and blended the metallic camera bump housing into the side rails of the phone, and itās a good look. They may be cribbing someone elseās work, but at least itās one of the smart kids in the class.
OnePlus is doing that thing again where the carrier version of the phone ā only sold through T-Mobile in the US ā has an IP68 rating, but the unlocked version doesnāt. OnePlus says thereās no build quality difference between the unlocked phone and the one on T-Mobileās shelves. Do with that information what you will.
The physical size differences between the 10 Pro and any other big flagship Android phone are small ā just a few millimeters in either direction, depending on what device youāre comparing it to. That said, it feels a little sleeker and easier to handle, owing partly to that taller screen. Itās easier for me to wield than the Pixel 6 Pro, which just feels needlessly chunky the more I use it. The 10 Proās in-display optical fingerprint sensor is fast and responsive, too, which is an advantage versus the Pixelās slow fingerprint scanner. All around, itās an enjoyable phone to carry and use, even for this small phone fan.
The OnePlus 10 Pro uses this yearās top Qualcomm chipset, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1. At launch, the only variant sold in North America will be the 128GB version with 8GB of RAM ā OnePlus says its 256GB / 12GB RAM will be available in the US at a later date. These specs offer plenty of processing power for day-to-day tasks. I noticed some very occasional stutters with heavier tasks like playing Genshin Impact, but for all intents and purposes, this is a speedy device that delivers flagship-level performance.
Like any other 2022 flagship phone, the 10 Pro offers 5G connectivity. Itās just sub-6GHz 5G, no super-fast millimeter wave (mmWave), which isnāt a problem for the vast majority of people. Thereās full low- and mid-band 5G support on T-Mobile right from launch, but the story gets complicated for the other major US carriers. At launch, the 10 Pro wonāt have certification to use Verizonās 5G network, but OnePlus says itās working with the carrier to obtain it. In all likelihood, Verizon 5G support will arrive shortly after launch like it did last year for the 9 and 9 Pro.
But also like last year, thereās no support for AT&Tās 5G network and no plan to add it at a later date. That means the 10 Pro will be stuck on 4G even as AT&T lights up new mid-band spectrum over the next couple of years that should make a big improvement to its 5G speeds. The Galaxy S22 Plus and Pixel 6 Pro both offer full 5G support on all three major carriers with no caveats, so thatās a substantial miss for the 10 Pro, especially if youāre hoping to use it on AT&T.
The 10 Proās big 5,000mAh battery easily lasts a day with moderate use.
The 10 Pro includes a big 5,000mAh battery that, in my experience, easily gets me through a day of moderate (and even some heavy) use. Using the Galaxy S22 Plus, I felt like I had to keep an eye on my battery percentage and was down into the single digits by the end of the day. Thatās not the case with the 10 Pro, though I will qualify that claim by saying that, since Iām on Verizon, I wasnāt able to test it on 5G.
I did enable every battery-draining setting I could think of, including the phoneās high-performance mode, 1440p screen resolution, Always on Display enabled, and the fastest screen refresh rate available. Even on a day mostly spent off of Wi-Fi, with some 4K video recording and navigation in the mix, I never ended up in uncomfortably low battery percentages.
Thereās more good news on the battery front: the OnePlus 10 Pro supports fast charging, and thereās a fast charger provided right in the box. You definitely wonāt get that with a Samsung or Google phone. In the US, the phone supports 65W charging, while other regions can charge at up to 80W. OnePlus says that this only accounts for a two-minute difference in the total time it takes to charge the phone, and realistically, 65W is plenty fast ā just over 30 minutes to bring the battery from 0 to 100 percent. At no point while I was testing this phone did I wish that it would charge faster.
All this is to say, you probably wonāt need to recharge the 10 Pro in the middle of the day unless you spend a lot of time gaming or streaming video. But if you do need to top the battery off, youāll be able to do so quickly and without having to spend another $30ā$50 to get a fast charger.
The Shelf now features a system-wide search feature called Scout.
The 10 Pro ships with OnePlusā version of Android 12. It got off to a rough start when it was released for the 9 and 9 Pro, but the launch bugs seem to have been resolved, and I havenāt noticed any significant issues. The Shelf is back ā thatās a home screen page where you can put your widgets and an inspirational message / daily affirmation / quote from a ā90s disaster movie. It now features OnePlusā search feature called Scout, which is similar to Spotlight on the iPhone. Itās not new new, but this is the first time the feature has appeared in a phone sold in the US. Itās a nice way to quickly find contacts, apps, and settings without scrolling through menu pages.
Iāve seen other device makers embrace Android 12ās focus on interface customization, but OnePlus doesnāt seem as keen on it. With a Pixel or Galaxy phone running Android 12, you can choose a color palette inspired by your wallpaper to apply to system-wide controls and app icons. OnePlus offers a fair amount of personalization options, but theyāre a little more limited, and they all have more of a āOnePlusā flavor to them. You can have the phone sample colors from a photo in your camera gallery and apply them to a stylized, graphic wallpaper. Itās neat but a decidedly different vibe ā one thatās a little more grown up and a little less playful.
OnePlus has boosted its support policy to provide three major OS updates and four years of security updates for the 10 Pro. Thatās not as good as what Samsung and Google offer, but itās getting closer. Google also promises three major OS updates for its own devices but has extended security support to up to five years. Samsung still offers the best support among Android device makers, with four years of OS upgrades and five years of security updates. OnePlus isnāt matching that, but itās taking a step in the right direction.
There are three rear cameras on the 10 Pro, and theyāre broadly the same as last yearās.
There are three rear cameras on the 10 Pro. The fourth cutout on the camera bump belongs to the flash, not a silly monochrome sensor or something like that, thank goodness. There havenāt been any major updates to the rear camera hardware compared to the 9 Pro, but the selfie camera is upgraded with double the resolution.
Main: 48-megapixels f/1.8 with OIS
Ultrawide: 50-megapixel f/2.2
Telephoto: 8-megapixel f/2.4 with OIS
Front: 32-megapixel, fixed focus
This isnāt exactly the same camera system as last year, and there are some software-based improvements. Thereās now an option to shoot in HEIF (High Efficiency Image Format), a compressed still photo format with 10-bit color that Apple has also adopted. Itās not on by default, but you can enable it for all three rear cameras. Provided youāre viewing a HEIF image on a display that supports it, youāll see a subtle improvement in the range of color it can reproduce compared to a standard 8-bit JPEG. The 10 Pro can shoot 8K video at 24p, albeit with a fairly heavy crop, and offers 4K shooting up to 120p for slow motion.
OnePlus has introduced a new RAW shooting mode, too, called RAW Plus, which is accessible in the camera appās Pro mode. Itās a computational RAW mode, like Appleās ProRAW and Samsungās Expert RAW. Unlike standard RAW shooting, computational RAW modes include data from multiple frames to give you a final RAW image with more flexibility for post-processing.
Iām glad to see it on the 10 Pro, though in the limited testing Iāve been able to do with it, Iām not seeing the noticeable improvements over standard RAW shooting that I saw using Samsungās version. The RAW Plus file sizes arenāt substantially bigger than the standard RAWs either, which leads me to believe itās not compiling a lot more information into that computational RAW file. Maybe this feature is a work in progress. In any case, RAW Plus gives you standard DNG files, so you can tinker with them in any RAW processing software like Lightroom or an app like Snapseed.
There are a few more additions to the camera feature set, including three new color filters called Master Styles named for Hasselblad ambassadors, a long exposure mode, and manual exposure controls for video recording. OnePlus has also tweaked its image processing for noise reduction and dynamic range.
This list of updates is frankly a little underwhelming, especially considering that OnePlusā camera capabilities were already lagging behind that of Samsung and Google. Samsungās phones now produce some of the best portrait mode photos from any phone, and Google just updated its very good Pixel camera system with all-new hardware. The images Iāve taken with the 10 Pro are good, and the ultrawide camera is still better than most, but I canāt say Iām impressed otherwise.
Night mode photos are weirdly over-brightened, and the camera sometimes has a tendency to overexpose images, even in moderate indoor lighting. Portrait mode photos look okay, but side by side with the S22 Plus, itās obvious how much further ahead Samsung is. I hope OnePlus will put a little more effort into the next iteration of its camera rather than relying so much on its Hasselblad partnership to do the leg work.
A minimalist vibe and sleek software make the OnePlus 10 Pro a likable device.
There are a lot of things I like about the OnePlus 10 Pro, starting with the day-to-day experience of using the phone. It just looks nice. Its software is nice. It isnāt fussy or loaded with a lot of apps I donāt need. Itās pleasant to use, like a phone should be.
OnePlus has taken another step in the evolution of its flagship offerings, and itās a good one. This feels like a device that knows what it is and who itās for, more so than the 9 and 9 Pro. But itās tough to recommend this phone when the Pixel 6 Pro is right there, at the same price, with full 5G support on every carrier and a much better camera system. The Galaxy S22 Plus is a little more expensive, but it also has a better camera system, broader 5G support, and will get an additional year of OS upgrades, so that extra $100 might be money well spent in the long run.
Camera quality and 5G compatibility are likely major considerations for someone buying a premium Android phone in 2022, so itās a shame that the OnePlus doesnāt measure up in those categories. But thereās a likability factor, too. And depending on your priorities, that might be more important than taking better portrait mode photos. The new OnePlus has some more work to do, but it definitely knows how to make a likable phone that feels one of a kind.
Photography by Allison Johnson / The Verge