
OnePlus 13s review: A compact flagship for small hands and tight pockets
Tushar Kanwar The OnePlus 13s combines performance with compact design. It has a powerful Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, a long-lasting battery, and a sleek aesthetic, offering a flagship experience without the bulk Small is beautiful
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Compact flagships have been in and out of favour over the past few years, with the likes of the iPhone 'mini' series and the smaller Asus Zenfone models trying and failing to make smaller phones a mainstream success. Off late though, there's been a bit of a renaissance for pocket rockets—compact, reasonably sized flagships with the latest chips and very little to no compromises as compared to their large-screened brethren (cue cheers from folks with average sized hands and ladies who are tired of having to figure out the complex maths needed to fit large flagships in tight pockets).
Compact flagships have been in and out of favour over the past few years, with the likes of the iPhone 'mini' series and the smaller Asus Zenfone models trying and failing to make smaller phones a mainstream success. Off late though, there's been a bit of a renaissance for pocket rockets—compact, reasonably sized flagships with the latest chips and very little to no compromises as compared to their large-screened brethren (cue cheers from folks with average sized hands and ladies who are tired of having to figure out the complex maths needed to fit large flagships in tight pockets).
Just in the past year alone, we've had the base iPhone 16/16e and the S25, along with the Google Pixel 9/9Pro, and let's not forget the excellent Xiaomi 15, all of which have done their bit to make small phones desirable again, sans the usual caveats of compromised specs and anemic battery life. And now, we have the OnePlus 13s ( ₹ 54,999 excl. bank discounts), the 'smol' member of the OnePlus 13 family that may just have cracked the code for making all the right decisions for OnePlus' first compact flagship. Design details
OnePlus has veered strongly off the track with the design of the 13s, and there's an unmistakable resemblance to the iPhone design, with the flat aluminum frame, glass back and curved corners. Not that that's a bad thing – the fit and finish is excellent, and the phone looks as impeccably put together as the pricier iPhone Pros—it's just that it doesn't have that distinctive OnePlus design language.
Furthering that impression is the iconic alert slider giving way to the new 'Plus' key on the left edge, which invokes the AI Plus Mind utility similar to what Nothing has done with its Essential Space app (more on this later). Again, it's a bit of a nod to the iPhone's Action button, not bad at all but just not the OnePlus you've come to know all these years. The squircle camera module
Not only is the design easy on the eyes—check out the gorgeous green variant with that neatly integrated 'squircle' camera module to know what I mean—it's easier on the hands as well, and the ergonomics feel great. It's well balanced, easy to grab and go, and the buttons are all within reach, although the 6.32-inch display is still a bit of a two-handed affair when you want to reach for the notification panel, despite its slim bezels.
Compared to its peers, it's about the same size as the 16e or the Pixel 9a, and just a tad smaller than the Xiaomi 15. That said, it's got this dense feeling about it, but I'd ask you to read ahead to the battery life for the 185g weight to feel perfectly justified. In terms of durability, you get Gorilla Glass 7i on the front and Panda glass protection on the rear, and a somewhat limited IP65 ingress protection—good enough for the splash or water or light rain but not enough to take a dip in the pool.
Also read: How next-gen semiconductor chips will supercharge gadgets
Now, you're obviously getting a smaller 6.32-inch 2640 x 1216-pixel AMOLED LTPO display, with a 120Hz refresh rate, Dolby Vision/HDR10+ support and a 800 nits display that's sufficiently bright but noticeably less bright than the flagship OnePlus 13. It's also a bit stubbier and less immersive as a display for gaming or watching content, but hey, you wanted a smaller phone, right? At least it's good to see the wet-finger-friendly Aqua Touch tech works on this screen, and the optical fingerprint sensor works well even as it is placed far too low on the display to be comfortable to use without adjusting your grip. Stereo speakers are loud and offer good stereo separation but get a bit tinny when loud. Under the hood
Traditionally, smaller phones tend to scrimp on flagship hardware, citing thermal management issues due to the limited space available. Not on the 13s, which is powered by the same Snapdragon 8 Elite chip that powers most of today's Android flagships (not some underclocked variant) and you get 12GB of fast LPDDR5X memory and a choice of either 256GB or 512GB ( ₹ 59,999) of UFS 4.0 storage. Yet, the 13s is dealing with physics, and despite a massive 4,400mm² vapor chamber which does well to keep the chip cool and prevent throttling during games like Genshin Impact and Grid Legends, it does top out on performance quicker than the bigger 13 over longer gaming sessions. Real world performance is excellent, and there's never a situation where one found the phone even remotely lacking in performance.
Like the rest of the OnePlus 13 family, the 13s runs OxygenOS 15 based on Android 15, and the aforementioned AI Plus Mind feature takes screenshots of any information you want to save, and saves it in the Mind Space app. Thereon, the app uses AI to extract information, which stays pretty much inside the same app, ready to be added to external apps when you open the Mind Space. It's a little limited in utility for now, but elsewhere you get AI transcription, translation and summarization across popular apps like YouTube, Instagram and WhatsApp, and an AI call assistant for real time call translation and summarization on phone calls. And as always, Google's Gemini features are there should you not want to dip your toes in OnePlus AI waters just yet. Battery wizardry
Yet, it's the battery where OnePlus has pulled out some A-grade witchcraft. Not only has it packed in a whopping 5,850 mAh battery which is much larger than most larger flagship phones, but it's tuned for efficiency so well you regularly end up with 7 hours-plus on screen-on-time. Talk about shaming the competition—it's smaller YET manages to pack in a larger battery and lasts longer…and this is without employing the newer silicon-carbon tech batteries. And when you do run low, 80W charging gets you up and 75% running in 30 minutes, with a full charge taking a little under an hour. There's also a bypass charging feature which powers the phone directly during gaming, to lower battery strain and excess heating. No wireless charging though, likely a victim of the price point. Photo realistic
It's with the camera that OnePlus has chosen a slightly unconventional approach—a dual camera system with a 50MP rear and a 50MP 2x telephoto, but no ultrawide that we see on many phones including the cheaper 13R. Given the 50MP main sensor would be perfectly capable of 2x-cropping into the image without any loss of detail, it's an odd decision to ship without an ultra-wide shooter…or to not pack in a higher zoom telephoto. Plus no optical image stabilization on the telephoto, or any macro capabilities either. The 32MP selfie camera does a bit to redeem the situation – it's the first selfie shooter with auto-focus for a OnePlus device. Images shot on the main shooter offer good details, rich colors and punchy contrast, while the telephoto matches the main camera, just a bit softer. It'll do well for social media and casual sharing, but it's when you compare it to its peers that the 13s' biggest compromise becomes evident. It can't match the 16e's consistency or the Pixel 9a's portrait mode, and then you compare it to the Xiaomi 15, which blows all other compact flagships out of the water. Verdict
OnePlus has had to make some tough choices to make a compact flagship, and it has chosen well…almost. It's a solid looker that's easy to handle, the performance is top-shelf stuff, and the battery capacity and longevity are the sort of stuff others would do well to emulate. There are a few omissions linked to the less-than-flagship pricing – wireless charging, IP68 waterproofing and USB 3 speeds on the Type-C port, not to mention the odd exclusion of the ultrawide – which makes it a wee bit less feature complete than the true flagships. Just know this - this one won't stretch your pocket, in more ways than one.
Also read: How to share your Kindle e-books with a reading buddy Topics You May Be Interested In
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Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
OnePlus 13s review: A near-perfect compact phone, minus a few flagship perks
After hitting a home run with the OnePlus 13 and OnePlus 13R earlier this year, OnePlus has now expanded its flagship lineup with a compact addition—the OnePlus 13s. This is almost the same phone that launched as the OnePlus 13T in China wit a couple of changes. As for the new India specific 's' branding, OnePlus says it stands for a Stronger, Smarter and Smaller form factor. I have been using the OnePlus 13s as my primary device for nearly a month now, and here is my take on how it performs in the real world. There are a lot of things you can fault OnePlus for but one thing that you have to admit about the company is that they continue to provide one of the most wholesome Unboxing experiences in the market and the OnePlus 13s is no different. The 13s comes in the same red coloured box as its siblings and the setup inside is also similar to them. After opening the box, one is greeted with a device first wrapped inside a paper sheet, followed by some paperwork, SIM ejector tool, an 80W white coloured adapter, a traditional red coloured OnePlus cable and a colour matched case. The in-hand feel of the OnePlus 13s is very premium thanks to the full metal finish, curved edges and obviously the smaller form factor. While the phone comes with a 6.32 inch display, OnePlus says they have also worked on narrowing down the bezels to make sure the ultimate size comparable to a 6.1 inch device from other brands. The smaller form factor means that despite the 13s boasting almost the same thickness as the OnePlus 13, it's much easier to hold and at 186grams it's way too light on the pocket. However, I would still like to see OnePlus reduce the size a little bit in order to make way for better one-handed usage. OnePlus 13s in the black colour variant. OnePlus 13s with Plus key on the side OnePlus 13s features a full aluminium build OnePlus 13s features 6.32 inch LTPO AMOLED display OnePlus 13s features a dual camera setup with a 50MP Sony LYT-700 primar sensor with OIS and a 50MP 2x telephoto lens. The front shooter is a 32MPP Galaxycore GC32E sensor with autofocus. While the rear camera can shoot at a maximum of 4k 60fps, the front shooter is limited to 4k at 30fps. The primary shooter is exactly the same from the OnePlus 13R just like that device there isn't much to complaint about for the price point with the phone taking pictures with plenty of details, true to life colour tones and reliable HDR performance. The telephoto shooter also does the job well in most daylight scenarios with even images up to 6x being usable but anything beyond that kind of loses its sheen. In low light, the telephoto sensor can capture good pictures but they can turn out to be shaky if one is not very careful, owing to a lack of OIS. The 32MP autofocus sensor, however, is very good addition to this setup and the results were pretty impressive in my testing with the output from this sensor even rivalling that of the OnePlus 13. The selfie shooter captures sharp images that retain facial detail and maintain contrast well without making the final image look overly processed. OnePlus 13s camera sample OnePlus 13s camera sample OnePlus 13s camera sample OnePlus 13s camera sample OnePlus 13s camera sample OnePlus 13s camera sample OnePlus 13s camera sample OnePlus 13s selfie camera sample OnePlus 13s selfie camera sample OnePlus 13s runs on OxygenOS 15 based on Android 15 and the company has promised 4 years of OS updates and 6 years of security patches. While ,in my opinion, OxygenOS is already the best user experience that one can get on Android with some essential and other unnecessary AI features, OnePlus has actually went on to improve this further with a new suite of features on OnePlus 13s. For one, the dialler app has been completely revamped to make it in tune with the rest of the UI while also adding an AI call assistant that can seamless translate calls between different languages and even summarize the conversations. Another point worth noting is that since its a system dialler, there is no alerts while recording phone calls. An AI VoiceScribe feature is also present during WhatsApp calls now that allows users to start recording (with a sound alert), get AI summary of a conversation or even turn on captions. There are also a number of new AI features that OnePlus is bringing with the 13s which includes AI translation, AI Search (for natural language search), AI Reframe and AI Best Frame. OnePlus has made only one change from the OnePlus 13T to the 13s by reducing the battery size from 6,200mAh to 5,850mAh and replacing the front 16MP shooter with a 32MP shooter (more on this later). While some people may grudge the company for this change, I am actually perfectly fine with this arrangement given that this battery is powering only a 6.32 inch display and OnePlus has also improved the battery optimization a lot compared to the OnePlus 13. Despite using the phone as my regular driver with 5G turned on, I could easily stretch for it for over a day and into to the 1.5 dayish category. Do keep in mind, though, that this figure could be different for other users and my use case included no to very low gaming, mostly browsing the web, running social media apps, watching occasional YouTube videos and listening to songs. With good part out of the way, I am actually extremely disappointed with the new strategy that OnePlus is employing of increasing the battery size while keeping the charging speeds low (by their standards). The 13s only supports 80W of fast charging and no support for wireless charging - which is a definite disparity compared to the OnePlus' actual 'flagship' of the year. The OnePlus 13s is the first phone from the company to drop its iconic alert slider in favour of a new iPhone style Plus Key. But instead of offering a like for like swap with just ring profile controls, OnePlus has built in additional functionalities such as launching the voice recorder, taking a screenshot or photo, and most notably, activating AI Plus Mind. Unfortunately, the Plus Key is not customisable yet. You can only assign one task at a time. So if you have set it to change ring profiles, you will not be able to access Plus Mind without reassigning the key. As for Plus Mind, it is a good first step from OnePlus toward building an artificial memory system of sorts. But its current functionality is limited, and its true potential will likely only emerge with future updates. Right now, you can only store items in AI Plus Mind by tapping the designated Plus Key. There is no option to share content directly into it, like a web article you want to revisit later. At this stage, the feature feels more like an extension of the screenshot tool, with the AI offering a brief description of what you have captured. However, there is no way to interact with the underlying model. For instance, when I pointed the camera at my bedsheet and used the Plus Key to capture it, the AI correctly identified the colour and even recognised the design as a Mandala print. But that is where the interaction ends. You cannot ask follow up questions or explore more about Mandala prints. The OnePlus 13s runs on the same Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset as its elder sibling and indeed most other flagship phones launched this year. Just like its elder sibling, the 13s also comes with support for LPDDR5x RAM and UFS 4.0 storage. As one would expect, the top of the line specifications also translate into real-world performance and the OnePlus 13s faces no issues while handling day to day tasks, multi-tasking (thanks to OnePlus' Open Canvas) and switching between multiple apps. I did face a lot of heating issues with the phone during the initial period but since then the problem has been more or less tapered down with a software update. That being said, the 13s does have a tendency to stay on the warmer side while running the benchmarks or during prolonged gaming sessions, not so much in day to day usage. And finally for the benchmarks: Antutu: OnePlus 13s garnered a score of 24,01,817 which is higher than the score I received for the OnePlus 13 but lower than the results of iQOO 13 GeekBench 6 CPU: Single core score of 2,722 and a multi-core score of 7,266 3D Mark's Extreme Wild Life Stress Test: Best loop score of 6,086 and a lowest loop score of 4,825 with stability at an impressive 79.3% At an effective starting price of ₹ 49,999, the OnePlus 13s isn't the most perfect phone out there. It misses out on an ultra-wide-angle lens, IP68 rating, Hasselblad tuning, and OIS for the telephoto camera. It also faces stiff competition from other OnePlus offerings like the 13R and even last year's OnePlus 12. But where OnePlus has truly succeeded is in delivering a compact flagship that doesn't feel like a compromise. If you're looking for a smaller phone that's genuinely usable with one hand, the OnePlus 13s stands out thanks to its top-tier processor, vibrant LTPO AMOLED display, feature-rich software experience, and solid battery life. The cherry on top is that OnePlus has nailed the ergonomics here with the 13s offering a lightweight form factor and perhaps the most premium in-hand feel you'll get on any phone right now.


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
Apple under pressure to shine after AI stumble
By Glenn Chapman Pressure is on Apple to show it hasn't lost its magic despite broken promises to ramp up iPhones with generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) as rivals race ahead with the technology. Apple will showcase plans for its coveted devices and the software powering them at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference ( WWDC ) kicking off Monday in Silicon Valley. The event comes a year after the tech titan said a suite of AI features it dubbed "Apple Intelligence" was heading for iPhones, including an improvement of its much criticized Siri voice assistant. "Apple advertised a lot of features as if they were going to be available, and it just didn't happen," noted Emarketer senior analyst Gadjo Sevilla. Instead, Apple delayed the rollout of the Siri upgrade, with hopes that it will be available in time for the next iPhone release, expected in the fall. "I don't think there is going to be that much of a celebratory tone at WWDC," the analyst told AFP. "It could be more of a way for Apple to recover some credibility by showing where they're headed." Industry insiders will be watching to see whether Apple addresses the AI stumble or focuses on less splashy announcements, including a rumored overhaul of its operating systems for its line of devices. "The bottom line is Apple seemed to underestimate the AI shift, then over-promised features, and is now racing to catch up," Gene Munster and Brian Baker of Deepwater Asset Management wrote in a WWDC preview note. Rumors also include talk that Apple may add GenAI partnerships with Google or Perplexity to an OpenAI alliance announced a year ago. 'Double black eye' Infusing its lineup with AI is only one of Apple's challenges. Developers, who build apps and tools to run on the company's products, may be keen for Apple to loosen its tight control of access to iPhones. "There's still a lot of strife between Apple and developers," Sevilla said. "Taking 30% commissions from them and then failing to deliver on promises for new functionality-that's a double black eye." A lawsuit by Fortnite maker Epic Games ended with Apple being ordered to allow outside payment systems to be used at the US App Store, but developers may want more, according to the analyst. "Apple does need to give an olive branch to the developer community, which has been long-suffering," Sevilla said. "They can't seem to thrive within the restrictive guardrails that Apple has been putting up for decades now." As AI is incorporated into Apple software, the company may need to give developers more ability to sync apps to the platform, according to Creative Strategies analyst Carolina Milanesi. "Maybe with AI it's the first time that Apple needs to rethink the open versus closed ecosystem," Milanesi said. Apple on defensive Adding to the WWDC buildup is that the legendary designer behind the iPhone, Jony Ive, has joined with ChatGPT maker OpenAI to create a potential rival device for engaging with AI. "It puts Apple on the defensive because the key designer for your most popular product is saying there is something better than the iPhone," Sevilla said. While WWDC has typically been a software-focused event, Apple might unveil new hardware to show it is still innovating, the analyst speculated. And while unlikely to come up at WWDC, Apple has to deal with tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump in his trade war with China, a key market for sales growth as well as the place where most iPhones are made. Trump has also threatened to hit Apple with tariffs if iPhone production wasn't moved to the US, which analysts say is impossible given the costs and capabilities. "The whole idea of having an American-made iPhone is a pipe dream; you'd have to rewrite the rules of global economics," said Sevilla. One of the things Apple has going for it is that its fans are known for their loyalty and likely to remain faithful regardless of how much time it takes the company to get its AI act together, Milanesi said. "Do people want a smarter Siri? Hell yeah," Milanesi said. "But if you are in Apple, you're in Apple and you'll continue to buy their stuff."


Mint
4 hours ago
- Mint
OnePlus 13s review: A compact flagship for small hands and tight pockets
Tushar Kanwar The OnePlus 13s combines performance with compact design. It has a powerful Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, a long-lasting battery, and a sleek aesthetic, offering a flagship experience without the bulk Small is beautiful Gift this article Compact flagships have been in and out of favour over the past few years, with the likes of the iPhone 'mini' series and the smaller Asus Zenfone models trying and failing to make smaller phones a mainstream success. Off late though, there's been a bit of a renaissance for pocket rockets—compact, reasonably sized flagships with the latest chips and very little to no compromises as compared to their large-screened brethren (cue cheers from folks with average sized hands and ladies who are tired of having to figure out the complex maths needed to fit large flagships in tight pockets). Compact flagships have been in and out of favour over the past few years, with the likes of the iPhone 'mini' series and the smaller Asus Zenfone models trying and failing to make smaller phones a mainstream success. Off late though, there's been a bit of a renaissance for pocket rockets—compact, reasonably sized flagships with the latest chips and very little to no compromises as compared to their large-screened brethren (cue cheers from folks with average sized hands and ladies who are tired of having to figure out the complex maths needed to fit large flagships in tight pockets). Just in the past year alone, we've had the base iPhone 16/16e and the S25, along with the Google Pixel 9/9Pro, and let's not forget the excellent Xiaomi 15, all of which have done their bit to make small phones desirable again, sans the usual caveats of compromised specs and anemic battery life. And now, we have the OnePlus 13s ( ₹ 54,999 excl. bank discounts), the 'smol' member of the OnePlus 13 family that may just have cracked the code for making all the right decisions for OnePlus' first compact flagship. Design details OnePlus has veered strongly off the track with the design of the 13s, and there's an unmistakable resemblance to the iPhone design, with the flat aluminum frame, glass back and curved corners. Not that that's a bad thing – the fit and finish is excellent, and the phone looks as impeccably put together as the pricier iPhone Pros—it's just that it doesn't have that distinctive OnePlus design language. Furthering that impression is the iconic alert slider giving way to the new 'Plus' key on the left edge, which invokes the AI Plus Mind utility similar to what Nothing has done with its Essential Space app (more on this later). Again, it's a bit of a nod to the iPhone's Action button, not bad at all but just not the OnePlus you've come to know all these years. The squircle camera module Not only is the design easy on the eyes—check out the gorgeous green variant with that neatly integrated 'squircle' camera module to know what I mean—it's easier on the hands as well, and the ergonomics feel great. It's well balanced, easy to grab and go, and the buttons are all within reach, although the 6.32-inch display is still a bit of a two-handed affair when you want to reach for the notification panel, despite its slim bezels. Compared to its peers, it's about the same size as the 16e or the Pixel 9a, and just a tad smaller than the Xiaomi 15. That said, it's got this dense feeling about it, but I'd ask you to read ahead to the battery life for the 185g weight to feel perfectly justified. In terms of durability, you get Gorilla Glass 7i on the front and Panda glass protection on the rear, and a somewhat limited IP65 ingress protection—good enough for the splash or water or light rain but not enough to take a dip in the pool. Also read: How next-gen semiconductor chips will supercharge gadgets Now, you're obviously getting a smaller 6.32-inch 2640 x 1216-pixel AMOLED LTPO display, with a 120Hz refresh rate, Dolby Vision/HDR10+ support and a 800 nits display that's sufficiently bright but noticeably less bright than the flagship OnePlus 13. It's also a bit stubbier and less immersive as a display for gaming or watching content, but hey, you wanted a smaller phone, right? At least it's good to see the wet-finger-friendly Aqua Touch tech works on this screen, and the optical fingerprint sensor works well even as it is placed far too low on the display to be comfortable to use without adjusting your grip. Stereo speakers are loud and offer good stereo separation but get a bit tinny when loud. Under the hood Traditionally, smaller phones tend to scrimp on flagship hardware, citing thermal management issues due to the limited space available. Not on the 13s, which is powered by the same Snapdragon 8 Elite chip that powers most of today's Android flagships (not some underclocked variant) and you get 12GB of fast LPDDR5X memory and a choice of either 256GB or 512GB ( ₹ 59,999) of UFS 4.0 storage. Yet, the 13s is dealing with physics, and despite a massive 4,400mm² vapor chamber which does well to keep the chip cool and prevent throttling during games like Genshin Impact and Grid Legends, it does top out on performance quicker than the bigger 13 over longer gaming sessions. Real world performance is excellent, and there's never a situation where one found the phone even remotely lacking in performance. Like the rest of the OnePlus 13 family, the 13s runs OxygenOS 15 based on Android 15, and the aforementioned AI Plus Mind feature takes screenshots of any information you want to save, and saves it in the Mind Space app. Thereon, the app uses AI to extract information, which stays pretty much inside the same app, ready to be added to external apps when you open the Mind Space. It's a little limited in utility for now, but elsewhere you get AI transcription, translation and summarization across popular apps like YouTube, Instagram and WhatsApp, and an AI call assistant for real time call translation and summarization on phone calls. And as always, Google's Gemini features are there should you not want to dip your toes in OnePlus AI waters just yet. Battery wizardry Yet, it's the battery where OnePlus has pulled out some A-grade witchcraft. Not only has it packed in a whopping 5,850 mAh battery which is much larger than most larger flagship phones, but it's tuned for efficiency so well you regularly end up with 7 hours-plus on screen-on-time. Talk about shaming the competition—it's smaller YET manages to pack in a larger battery and lasts longer…and this is without employing the newer silicon-carbon tech batteries. And when you do run low, 80W charging gets you up and 75% running in 30 minutes, with a full charge taking a little under an hour. There's also a bypass charging feature which powers the phone directly during gaming, to lower battery strain and excess heating. No wireless charging though, likely a victim of the price point. Photo realistic It's with the camera that OnePlus has chosen a slightly unconventional approach—a dual camera system with a 50MP rear and a 50MP 2x telephoto, but no ultrawide that we see on many phones including the cheaper 13R. Given the 50MP main sensor would be perfectly capable of 2x-cropping into the image without any loss of detail, it's an odd decision to ship without an ultra-wide shooter…or to not pack in a higher zoom telephoto. Plus no optical image stabilization on the telephoto, or any macro capabilities either. The 32MP selfie camera does a bit to redeem the situation – it's the first selfie shooter with auto-focus for a OnePlus device. Images shot on the main shooter offer good details, rich colors and punchy contrast, while the telephoto matches the main camera, just a bit softer. It'll do well for social media and casual sharing, but it's when you compare it to its peers that the 13s' biggest compromise becomes evident. It can't match the 16e's consistency or the Pixel 9a's portrait mode, and then you compare it to the Xiaomi 15, which blows all other compact flagships out of the water. Verdict OnePlus has had to make some tough choices to make a compact flagship, and it has chosen well…almost. It's a solid looker that's easy to handle, the performance is top-shelf stuff, and the battery capacity and longevity are the sort of stuff others would do well to emulate. There are a few omissions linked to the less-than-flagship pricing – wireless charging, IP68 waterproofing and USB 3 speeds on the Type-C port, not to mention the odd exclusion of the ultrawide – which makes it a wee bit less feature complete than the true flagships. Just know this - this one won't stretch your pocket, in more ways than one. Also read: How to share your Kindle e-books with a reading buddy Topics You May Be Interested In