The OnePlus 5T, like its non-T sibling is powered by the Snapdragon 835 chipset, and that puts it on a level playing field with virtually every Android flagship that's not Samsung or Huawei. The 5T ships in two versions, one with 6GB of RAM, the other having 8GB.
Starting out with some CPU performance numbers, we look at GeekBench 4.1. All major Snapdragon 835 representatives are here, with the Exynos 8895 (Galaxy S8+), Kirin 970 (Mate 10 Pro), and A11 Bionic (iPhone 8 Plus) thrown in for good measure. It is precisely those three that are ahead of the OP5T in the multi-core test - the Mate 10 Pro and Galaxy S8+ by an inch, the iPhone 8 Plus by a mile.
Higher is better
In the single-core portion of the benchmark the iPhone is again in another league next to its Android competition. Among droids, OnePlus's latest is second to the S8+ only, though differences are, indeed, marginal.
Higher is better
From CPU to GPU, it's time to Bench the GFX. The OP5T is more or less equally potent as the rest of its current competitors when it comes to raw power. The odd frame per second here and there in the offscreen benchmarks doesn't mean a world of a difference.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
In onscreen tests, where the device's actual resolution comes into play, there's a clear difference between 1080p and QHD phones, the latter predictably falling behind. That said, the OP5T is a few fps behind the OP5 - the baggage of the extra pixels shows. Actually, last year's 3T can give the 5T a run for its money.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
When we move on to Basemark X, we observe that the OP5T is a few points behind the OP5, the two in turn slightly behind the Pixel 2XL. The Exynos Gaalxy S8+ leads the way here, with the Mate 10 Pro showing some advantage over the pack of Snapdragons.
Higher is better
Put processor and graphics together, throw in RAM and storage, and we're doing compound benchmarks now, trying to put a number next to overall performance. Well, here's one area where the OnePlus 5T beats them all, iPhone 8 Plus included, at least in Basemark OS II 2.0. There's a pretty wide gap between the 5T, and last year's 3T, if you're considering upgrading.
Higher is better
The iPhone 8 Plus takes what's rightfully its own in Antutu, claiming top spot again, though the question still stands just how comparable these results are across platforms.
Among droids, however, OnePlus' fives rule, followed closely by the Mate 10 Pro.
Higher is better
The OnePlus 5T is a top performer, but you wouldn't expect otherwise just looking at the specsheet. It's on par with its top-class competition and is a worthwhile upgrade over the OP3 or 3T. If you have the OP5, however, the 5T isn't really a meaningful upgrade in terms of performance - duh, the two came out 5 months apart and have mostly the same hardware.
One thing worth noting is that we observed some throttling and heat buildup after repeated benchmark runs. It's not uncommon, but the OnePlus 5 does tend to get a bit hotter than most.
Tip us
1.9m 150k
RSS
EV
Merch
Log in I forgot my password Sign up