The Find 7 features a very similar chipset and processor, and identical GPU to its 1080p-toting sibling, the Find 7a. Both devices have a quad-core Krait 400 Snapdragon 801 CPU and Adreno 330 graphics, but the Snapdragon 801 chip on the Find 7 is of the MSM8974AC variant is clocked in at 2.5GHz, (as opposed to the AB on the Find 7a clocked in at 2.3GHz).
This puts the Find 7 in a unique position to match up directly with the likes of the Samsung Galaxy S5, and possibly even beat it in some of our tests thanks to its 3GB of RAM. Keep in mind that the Find 7 is the only device - besides the LG G3 - that features a QHD display, so expect slightly lower graphic benchmark results due to it having to push out more pixels.
The Find 7 demonstrates some serious horsepower in our GeekBench 3 and AnTuTu 4 benchmarks which put to the test the hardware combo inside the smartphone. GeekBench 3 is more CPU-intensive, whereas AnTuTu 4 is a compound benchmark - testing CPU, GPU, memory performance, etc. The Find 7 beats out all current flagships in these two tests, very impressive from Oppo.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Basemark OS II is another all-round benchmark. It gives an overall score along with single-core, multi-core, and math performance, among others. We focus on the overall and CPU scores. We didn't detect any difference between the scores posted in the original and anti-cheat versions of the benchmark. Again, great numbers posted by the Oppo Find 7.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Next up we have GFXBench's 2.7 T-Rex and 3.0 Manhattan. In 1080p offscreen mode the GPU is tasked with performing graphical computations in 1920 x 1080px resolution, while the onscreen mode uses the screen's native 2560 x 1440px resolution. T-Rex is the less demanding of the two tests and here the Find 7 comes in just below 20fps in the onscreen test, which is at the bottom of the pack but still good considering the higher resolution.
The more demanding Manhattan benchmark has the Find 7 keeping pace in offscreen performance, but at a measly 6.7fps in the onscreen test - again partially excused by the higher resolution compared to its competitors. Still anything under 30fps raises a flag so you might run into some issues with game titles aimed at taking full advantage of the higher resolution - the technology is just not there yet.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
BrowserMark 2.1 looks at HTML 5 performance, while Mozilla's Kraken 1.1 is JavaScript-centric. The Find 7 again scores second in both tests, which should result in a very robust browsing experience considering the 5.5-inch screen with 534ppi. It should be a step ahead of 1080p-toting devices when it comes to text crispness and fidelity.
Higher is better
Lower is better
The Oppo Find 7 shows stunning performance when it comes to our compound benchmarks, where it beats out all of the current flagship competition thanks to its robust chipset and 3GB of RAM. Browsing performance is also great, and fast browsing on the QHD screen is a definite plus for the Find 7.
As expected, the 1440p screen took its toll when it came to graphics performance. The extra resolution it had to pump out made it come in behind current 1080p flagships, and even the LG G3 - its only QHD rival - was also able to beat it out. Still, integrated mobile GPU's have clearly not caught up to displays yet, so the Find 7 is just about as good as it gets when looking at overall performance.
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