OPPO F7 DETAILED REVIEW
Oppo F7 Review
HIGHLIGHTS
The Oppo F7 features a 25-megapixel front
camera and a 3400mAh battery.
·
General performance is very good and
the
phone doesn't heat up too much.
·
The price starts at Rs. 21,990 for 4GB RAM
and 64GB storage variant.
Oppo’s ‘selfie expert’ F-series smartphones have been
relatively popular in India, so much so that over the years, the company
has focused most of its marketing and promotional eorts on this feature alone.
There’s also the A-series that’s often refreshed in India, but others like the
R-series have been ignored Internationally, the top-end phone from Oppo
right now is the R15, which doesn’t seem to be launching in India anytime soon.
However, we have the next best thing here in the form of the Oppo F7.
The latest sele-centric model has a lot in common with the
R15, such as the new MediaTek Helio P60 SoC, a high-resolution front camera,
and of course, a notch. The Oppo F7 is
also priced pretty aggressively, starting at Rs. 21,990, which actually
undercuts the Vivo V9 (Review), another recent midrange competitor. We were
quite happy with Oppo’s last oering, the Oppo F5 (Review), so let’s see if
the F7 can match or even exceed our expectations.
Oppo F7 design
We’ve usually been
happy with the build quality and design of Oppo’s F-series smartphones, but the
company is taking a new approach with the F7. Instead of the usual metal back
panel, Oppo is using an all-plastic body. On one hand, the phone is very light
at just 158g, but on the other, it doesn’t feel very premium anymore. Oppo has
tried to remedy this with a glossy coat of paint for the sides, which looks
alright on the Diamond Black and Platinum Silver versions, but not so much on the
Solar Red variant that we had for review.
On the back, Oppo has used a piece of polymer composite
material. In our initial impressions of the Oppo F7, we found the rear panel to
scratch pretty easily, however this wasn't a problem with the retail unit that
we received for review. That said, it’s not impervious to dents, and applying
slight pressure with even a SIM eject tool caused a visible abrasion.
On the front, we have a 6.23-inch in-cell IPS display with a
resolution of 1080x2280 pixels, and Gorilla Glass 5. Due to the notch at
the top of the screen, the Oppo F7 falls into the 19:9 aspect ratio category.
The company has used this space quite cleverly, which we’ll get into in
the next section. The display doesn’t curve at the sides, and there’s still a
bit of a chin at the bottom. Within the notch, Oppo has made room for the
earpiece, front camera, and a couple of sensors, but the notication LED has
been dropped. This phone ships with a screen guard preinstalled, which is quite
annoying as the edges aren't aligned with with the edges of the display, so it
rubs against your ngertips every time you try to pull down the notications
shade or swipe from the sides.
The buttons are easy to reach. At the bottom, we have a
single speaker grille, a Micro-USB port, and a 3.5mm headphone socket. The
speaker grille gets blocked by your palm easily when you’re playing a game or
watching a video in landscape mode. We’re still disappointed about the lack of
a Type-C port here, and we reached out to Oppo for an explanation as to why
this decision was made. In an emailed statement, the company said "A
large number of users are using the current USB ports so this would be more
convenient for users".
The SIM tray is placed on the right, and can hold two
Nano-SIMs and a microSD card (up to 256GB). There’s a ngerprint sensor at the
back, along with a single camera. In the Oppo F7 box, you get a 10W charger, a
USB cable, a silicone case, and a headset
Oppo F7 specications, software, and features
The Oppo F7 uses the new MediaTek Helio P60 octa-core
SoC, which is the same one used in the Oppo R15. It’s based on ARM’s big.LITTLE
architecture, marrying four high-performance ARM Cortex-A73 cores with four
power-ecient Cortex-A53 cores. It's manufactured using a 12nm FinFET fabrication
process, and has an integrated Mali-G72 MP3 graphics processor. The new
P60 is actually more powerful than even Qualcomm’s competing Snapdragon 626 and
636 SoCs. We got a score of 135,279 in AnTuTu 7, and 37fps in GFXbench's T-Rex
test.
The Oppo F7 version that we tested has 4GB of RAM and 64GB
of storage, but the F7 is also available in a version with 6GB of RAM and 128GB
of storage, which is priced at Rs. 26,990. Other specications include dual-band
Wi-Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 4.2, USB-OTG, FM radio, and 4G VoLTE. The F7 also
features an ambient light sensor, accelerometer, proximity sensor, Hall sensor,
and a gyroscope. There's a non-removable 3400mAh battery.
The new Oppo F7 ships with Android Oreo 8.1 out of the box,
but it’s hard to recognise it with all the customisations that have been made.
Oppo’s ColorOS 5.0 UI has some familiar gestures and tweaks from past
iterations, along with some new ones. First o, we have to say that we’re not
big fans of the new default theme. The icons are unnecessarily chunky and make
the UI feel dated. The Theme Store app doesn't oer many choices, and we only
found a couple of options that were good enough to use. Another annoyance with
the UI is the fact that you can’t swipe a notication away. Instead, you have to
swipe left and hit ‘Delete’, which just adds an unnecessary step to the
process.
The ngerprint sensor works well and is quick at
authentication. It can also be used for unlocking apps, and a secure space
within your phone’s internal storage. Oppo is making a big deal about its
new face unlock implementation, which is said to map and recognise 128 points
on a registered face. In practice, we found that it worked pretty well, and was
quick most of the time.
There’s a ‘raise to wake’ option, and in low light, the
screen gets brighter in an attempt to illuminate your face. We weren’t able to
fool it with a 2D picture, and it worked even when we had sunglasses on. The
latter is possible because the Oppo F7 doesn’t scan your eyes, which makes it
slightly less secure. Other phones such as the Vivo V9 require your eyes to be
open for face recognition to work
You can ditch the on-screen navigation keys in favour of
gestures, if you want an iPhone X-like experience. Once enabled, you get little
horizontal markers at the bottom of the display as a placeholder. A swipe up
takes you to the home screen, while swiping upwards and then holding for a few
moments brings up the app switcher. You can swipe up from either the left or
right edges to go a step back. There are dierent gesture styles to choose from,
depending on your preference.
As we stated earlier, Oppo has implemented some nifty
shortcuts that take advantage of the screen space to either side of the
notch. If you enable the Fullscreen Multitasking feature, you can access
features called Quick Apps and Quick Function. Quick Apps lets you add
shortcuts for some apps to the right of the notch, and on the left, there will
be controls for beginning a screen recording, taking a screenshot, and toggling
DND mode. These can be accessed when the phone is in landscape mode, by swiping
inwards from the notch area.
We found that the shortcuts were accessible when watching
YouTube videos, and even streaming through apps like Prime Video and
Netix, but not in most of the games we tried (only Asphalt 8: Airborne showed
them) and when watching local video les in MX Player or the stock video app. In
apps that support it, the Quick Apps feature lets you access apps within a
oating window so you can do things like send a message without exiting the app
you're in. The notch area is also used as to alert you when there’s a
background app that’s using the microphone, or if a split-screen app is running
in the background.
Security features include a secure keyboard, which renders
as overlay on top of Gboard and is claimed to keep your keystrokes
private, although it feels a bit clunky. You can spoof your identifying
information such as contacts, if apps require permissions to access them in
order to work. Kids Space lets you limit the apps your little ones have
access to when you hand them the phone.
Oppo Cloud gives you 5GB of free cloud storage for backups,
while Game Acceleration is supposed to adjust system resources for better
gameplay. You get a tonne of toggle switches in the notications shade,
including shortcuts for Google Now, the camera, screen recording, and Oppo
share, which can be used to send les over Wi-Fi to nearby Oppo phones. Stock
apps include Oppo’s own app store, a le manager, and an app for migrating
data over to another phone
Oppo F7
performance, cameras, and battery life
The low weight of the Oppo F7 makes it very comfortable to
use every day. However, the glossy back and sides make it a major ngerprint
magnet so it’s a real pain to keep clean. We’re not big fans of the new design,
and we think the older F5 still looks and feels more premium. We didn’t
have any trouble with 4G reception and call quality is good in all the areas we
tested it in. We’re also happy to report that the F7 runs fairly cool in most
use cases. In apps that don’t have native support, you get a little prompt to
stretch them to fullscreen. Some of the themes in Oppo's Theme Store weren't
notchready and had alignment issues. In some games, on-screen items can be
obscured when running in fullscreen mode.
The headset looks a lot like Apple’s EarPods but they don’t
sound all that great. The Oppo F7 has an audio enhancement feature called Real
Original Sound developed by Oppo and Dirac. It helps lift the mids and low-end
frequencies a bit, but it isn’t very noticeable with the bundled headset. You
can also create a custom EQ preset. There’s a Headphones Monitor toggle that is
said to provide a “live karaoke experience through the headphones,” but we
didn’t nd much use for it. The phone handles most popular video and audio
codecs, but it struggled to play 4K video les smoothly.
Being an F-series phone, there's a lot of focus on the front
camera of the Oppo F7. Oppo has picked a 25-megapixel Sony sensor, with an
f/2.0 aperture. The F7 also boasts of AI Beauty and Sensor HDR capabilities. AI
Beauty only works with the front camera, and lets the algorithms do the work of
judging how much beautication is needed. Most of the time, we found that it
worked quite well, but there were instances when it went a bit wrong. You can
manually choose the level of beautication too, along with various lters. It
also now works with other parts of your body too, like your neck. Sensor HDR
gives you a preview of the nal shot before it’s actually taken. In
practice, it works well with barely any shutter lag. There are some AR stickers
too, which are fun to play around with.
Image quality is very good in daytime shots, and the camera
manages to retain good detail and colour even indoors. The screen ash is
fairly eective, and even in low light, we managed to get bright and clear
seles, with little to no noise on our subjects' faces. There’s a depth eect
mode, which does a decent job with edge detection, and the level of blurring is
usually managed well. You can even use a palm gesture to take shots.
The rear camera has a 16-megapixel sensor with an f/1.8
aperture, which manages to capture decent details in stills, provided there’s
sucient light. Focusing is quick during the day, but does dip a bit in low
light. Macros are also handled well, with nicely saturated colours, and the
same holds true to an extent even in low light. Landscapes at night lose a bit
of detail, and objects in the distance lack good denition if you zoom in.
The camera app allows 2x zooming (except in Panorama mode)
but we don’t recommend this as it’s essentially just digital zoom, in which you
lose out on clarity. Expert mode lets you tinker around with the ISO, shutter
speed, etc, and you can also switch on Ultra HD, which stitches four
consecutive shots into a single higher-resolution frame (6212x9216 pixels).
Oddly, the phone doesn’t support 4K video recording, as the
maximum resolution is 1080p. There’s no electronic stabilisation either, so it’s
best not to move around too much when you shoot. Even slight hand shakes are
noticeable in the nal output, and even with ample light, we noticed a bit of
focus hunting when panning. You don’t get additional modes for video either,
such as slow-motion. The camera app is easy to use and that’s because the
layout is heavily inspired by iOS.
Battery life one of Oppo F7’s strong suits, and during
regular usage, we had no trouble getting about a day and half worth of runtime
on a single charge. With heavier usage, battery life does reduce, but the Oppo
F7 should still comfortably last you through a full day. Charging is a bit slow
as even with the 10W charger, we only managed get to about 23 percent in half
an hour.
The F7 doesn’t support Oppo’s VOOC ash charging
standard. We also didn’t like the fact that ColorOS doesn't have a battery
usage graph, which is typically found in the Settings app. There’s no option
for battery management in the Phone Manager app either. You get a simple Power
Saving toggle switch, but there’s no way to customise that mode.
OPPO F7 DETAILED REVIEW
Reviewed by bouddhajit
on
April 27, 2018
Rating:
Reviewed by bouddhajit
on
April 27, 2018
Rating:


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