
The Oppo F1 is a phone with a mission. It wants to trick
people into thinking you spent £300 ($450, AU$550) or more on a handset
when you actually only forked out £160 ($249, AU$285).
It does a good job too. Thin and with lots of metal on show, it comes across as quite a bit more expensive than the Moto G, even though it's actually around the same price.
If you want a budget handset that people won't instantly
recognize, the Oppo F1 is a top choice. And in the UK at least, it's
much easier to get hold of than most Oppo phones TechRadar has reviewed
to date.
But there is also now competition in the form of the Oppo F1 Plus.
The F1 Plus is now available around the world and we gave it three and a
half stars out of five - so it's worth reading our review and checking
you don't want the Plus instead of the Oppo F1.
If you do want the Plus instead, be warned it'll cost quite a bit more at £299 (AU$599, around US$430).
Design
How do you make something cheap seem
expensive? That's a tough one for many designers, because if you get it
wrong you might end up with a phone encrusted with plastic diamonds that
you couldn't even sell on eBay.
Oppo has nailed the
'cheap expensive' look here, though. It's all about putting in 20% of
the effort/cost for 80% of the returns.

The prime Oppo F1 tactic is using champagne-finish gold metal for the
back, but sneakily switching to plastic for the sides. You get the feel
of metal, but Oppo doesn't have to go to the trouble of cutting any
ports into metal, which costs a fair bit to do right.
When I first opened up the Oppo F1 and had a close look at
it, I experienced a twinge of disappointment when I realised that this
was how Oppo managed to make a metal phone at this price.
However,
a month on I still appreciate the feel of the metal back. Just don't
enter into this relationship expecting something that feels exactly like
an iPhone 6S.

It's not too far off, though. It has none of the chunk
factor of some other good budget Android phones, and there's a smooth
curvature to the sides of the Oppo F1 that means it doesn't feel boxy.
The display is even covered with 2.5D Gorilla Glass, which is toughened
and has a smoothed-off edge.
The Oppo F1 is out to
deliver on a whole load of s-words: skinny, smooth, sleek. It also looks
great, at least from the back – I wouldn't have flinched if someone
told me the phone cost £300/$400.
The Oppo F1 isn't quite
as pretty from the front, though – viewed face-on the handset exhibits a
slight boxiness that doesn't affect the rest of the phone. And, like
the OnePlus X, it has soft keys but they don't light up.

Still, this is one of the nicest-looking cheap handsets out
there, only obviously upstaged by the OnePlus X, which costs roughly the
same in the US and just £30 more in the UK, yet uses almost no
visible/proddable plastic. Competing with OnePlus in the pricing stakes
isn't easy, though.
Finishing touches that help the Oppo
F1 'fake it to make it' include a non-removable back and a SIM card tray
like you'd see in an iPhone; a lot of cheaper devices still use
peel-off back covers that hide a less fancy SIM slot.
هذا النص هو مثال لنص يمكن أن يستبدل في نفس المساحة، لقد تم توليد هذا النص من مولد النص العربى، حيث يمكنك أن تولد مثل هذا النص أو العديد من النصوص الأخرى إضافة إلى زيادة عدد الحروف التى يولدها التطبيق
قد يهمك أيضا :مراجعه الهواتف الحديثه
No comments:
Post a Comment