The OnePlus 5 is powered by the Snapdragon 835 chipset, and comes in two different trim levels: one with 6GB of RAM and 64GB of storage, and the other one with a higher 8GB/128GB. We have the latter - lucky us. OnePlus has fitted the 5 with LPDDR4X RAM for improved power efficiency over regular LPDDR4. Storage is UFS 2.1.
Update (June 22): In light of revelations that the OnePlus 5 is altering the behavior of its CPU cores (locking the LITTLE cluster at max frequency) when it detects a benchmark app, we figured we should mention it in the performance section of this review. While it's obviously a cheap trick that puts marketing ahead of consumer trust, it's also not giving the OP5 a huge advantage over the competition.
We ran the usual set of benchmarks on the OnePlus 5, starting with GeekBench, to see how the Kryo cores handle some intense CPU loads. Okay, we did have a general idea - after all, it's not the first S835 phone we've had at the office. Anyway, the 5 posts virtually identical numbers to the Xiaomi Mi 6 and HTC U11 in the single-core portion of GeekBench 4.1. The S835 Galaxy S8+ and the Xperia XZ Premium are a notch lower, but the Exynos Galaxy S8 outperforms them all (if only marginally).
Higher is better
The Exynos variant of the Galaxy S8 tops the OnePlus 5 in multi-core applications as well, but remains second behind the Mi 6. The other Snapdragon 835s post lower numbers with the Xperia XZ Premium in particular scoring below its paygrade.
Higher is better
Next we turn to Basemark OS II 2.0 for a comparative numerical representation of the OnePlus 5's overall performance. Well, it's good, the best of the Android world, actually. The iPhone 7 Plus still manages a couple hundred extra points, but both flavors of Galaxy S8s have been beaten by the latest OP.
Higher is better
The OnePlus 5 defeats the iPhone 7 Plus in Antutu and ends up on the top of the chart. 3000 points may sound like a lot, but in fact that's less than a 2% advantage over the HTC U11 and Xiaomi Mi 6.
Higher is better
In the graphics department, the OnePlus 5's Adreno 540 GPU is the powerhouse we've come to expect it to be, posting top fps numbers in GFXBench. In onscreen tests its FullHD resolution allows it to pull ahead of QHD rivals like the S8 and U11, and the older Snapdragon 821 inside the Google Pixel XL and LG G6 falls way behind the pack.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Basemark ES 3.1, the OpenGL 3.1-based benchmark, doesn't paint the OnePlus 5 in such a favorable light, positioning it towards the bottom of the Snapdragon 835/Adreno 540 pile. The 20-core Mali GPU of the Galaxy S8's Exynos chip is the clear winner here. Well, that and the iPhone 7 Plus, of course.
Higher is better
Unsurprisingly, the OnePlus 5 scores excellent results in all benchmarks, be it CPU or GPU targeted (and consequently in the compound ones too, duh!). Top-class chipset, heaps of RAM, speedy storage - any other outcome would have been a surprise.
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