Oppo R7 Plus review: Monster truck
Monster truck
The most basic of galleries
Oppo has come up with a custom Gallery for the R7 Plus, and it relies on simplicity. The default view is a grid of folders, with a name and number of images for each folder labeled underneath. You can't filter images by location, time, people or tags like you would in the stock app. Images inside folders are arranged on a rectangular grid and you have two options - image selection mode and start a slideshow. You can select multiple images (folders too) and then Share and Delete options become available.
The available features when viewing a single image are pretty standard - set image as wallpaper/contact image, share it, delete it or get a menu with more functions.
The image editor has also fallen victim to the trend for simplicity and offers one-touch color filters and image frames. Editing goes as serious as sharpening, blurring and applying a mosaic effect, which get a slider to control the intensity. You also get to crop rotate and mirror, and that's all.
Viewing an individual image • Editing options
Video player
The Oppo R7 Plus comes with a pretty simple-looking video player with extensive codec support - DivX, AVI, MKV, MP4 files played without a hitch, as did MOV videos. We had no issues playing files all the way up to 1080p resolution. AC3 sound was a no-go, but that's often the disappointing case.
The interface for video selection is pretty basic too - a list of all available files. The player supports subtitles too, but there's only an on/off toggle here, you can't manually pick the subtitle file (so it would have to have the same name as the video file to work, and be in the same directory). Also, some foreign language subtitles didn't display all characters correctly.
While watching a video you get a timeline slider, play/pause along with forward/back controls, a lock option (which locks the display against accidental touches) and a pop up toggle.
A feature that seems lifted right off the Samsung/LG flagships is the pop-up player. It's a small floating window that lets you have other apps working underneath. You can move it around to get it out of the way, but there's no transparency option.
Music player with Dirac HD
Oppo's latest music player has quite a simplistic interface and is very easy to use and navigate. The music player UI is pretty straightforward - your music library is organized into a local list of all music, favorites, artists, albums and folders. There's also an option to add a playlist.
The Now playing interface is split into two - the current playlist and the album art/music controls screen. You can swipe between the two. By default the player will look for lyrics and display them under the album art, which imitates a vinyl record. You can add album art if it's not built inside the tracks (but the player won't look for it automatically).
There's a playback mode button (normal, shuffle, repeat track) and a toggle for audio enhancement. That cycles through Dirac HD on and off, but only works with headphones attached. Audiophiles should be happy to head that the music player successfully played 16 and 24-bit FLAC files.
Now playing • Music player on the lockscreen and in the notification shade
Audio output is very good
The Oppo R7 Plus showed excellently clean output when working with an active external amplifier and it garnished it nicely loud output for an excellent showing.
Plugging in a pair of headphones does cause a drop in the volume levels but they still remain above average. Some stereo crosstalk creeps in, but it's no worse than average and while the frequency response and intermodulation distortion readings also degrade a bit, none of the results is actually bad. So while the Oppo phablet might not be the best musician around, it's certainly among the better ones.
And here go the results.
Test | Frequency response | Noise level | Dynamic range | THD | IMD + Noise | Stereo crosstalk |
Oppo R7 Plus | +0.01, -0.05 | -94.3 | 92.4 | 0.0018 | 0.0073 | -94.9 |
Oppo R7 Plus (headphones attached) | +0.33, -0.09 | -93.6 | 92.1 | 0.0059 | 0.224 | -59.2 |
Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge+ | +0.02, -0.05 | -93.3 | 93.2 | 0.0017 | 0.0070 | -93.7 |
Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge+ (headphones attached) | +0.03, -0.02 | -93.0 | 93.1 | 0.0058 | 0.038 | -58.3 |
Samsung Galaxy Note5 | +0.04, -0.01 | -93.6 | 93.5 | 0.0024 | 0.0076 | -94.7 |
Samsung Galaxy Note5 (headphones attached) | +0.02, -0.05 | -93.1 | 93.2 | 0.0023 | 0.030 | -84.1 |
LG G Flex2 | +0.01, -0.06 | -92.5 | 92.5 | 0.0031 | 0.012 | -91.5 |
LG G Flex2 (headphones attached) | +0.03, -0.10 | -92.6 | 92.1 | 0.0027 | 0.387 | -60.1 |
+0.04, -0.04 | -94.0 | 94.0 | 0.0013 | 0.0064 | -72.0 | |
+0.10, -0.04 | -94.0 | 93.9 | 0.0016 | 0.087 | -64.1 |
Oppo R7 Plus frequency response
You can learn more about the tested parameters and the whole testing process here.
Reader comments
- Anonymous
- 04 Aug 2021
- y6V
How did you manage to update its os to android 10, coz mine is stock up with outdated os? Please reply.
- Kurnia
- 22 Jan 2021
- SgK
Just upgrade to android 10 and still working good with my 3gb rom and 32 internal memory. So far so good....still happy with my phone
- Mubarak
- 10 Dec 2019
- fuf
Can't update software and even play store can't work