logo
#

Latest news with #OnePlusPad3

OnePlus Pad 3 Review: Aiming to be your next laptop
OnePlus Pad 3 Review: Aiming to be your next laptop

The Hindu

time4 days ago

  • The Hindu

OnePlus Pad 3 Review: Aiming to be your next laptop

OnePlus is gradually building up an ecosystem of power-packed products. As a brand, it has already established a strong foothold in the smartphone segment (as seen in our latest reviews), and it is now replicating this in the tab segment. The company has launched the 3rd generation of OnePlus Pads – the OnePlus Pad 3. Backed by strong features like the Snapdragon 8 Elite processor, a massive 12,140 mAh battery, a 13.2-inch LCD display, and the latest AI-powered multitasking interface, the new Pad 3 positions itself as a strong challenger for the latest iPad, and may emerge as a fan favourite. Right off the bat: the new keyboard accessory is a game-changer. It transforms the tablet into a near-laptop experience. Whether you're drafting documents, browsing, or juggling multiple apps, the keyboard is intuitive and responsive. It's sold separately, but if productivity is your goal, it's absolutely worth adding to your cart. Design & Build Let's start with the aesthetics. The OnePlus Pad 3 is available in two colour options: a classy Storm Blue and Frosted Silver. The model I reviewed was the Storm Blue version, which looks sharp and offers up premium vibes without being flashy. Despite a large 13.2-inch display and an 8-speaker system, the tab has a slim and balanced profile. With just 5.97mm thickness and a weight of 675g, it's one of the slimmest tablets, just a notch thicker than the iPad Pro, which still holds the crown at 5.1mm. The aluminium unibody design adds a premium feel and solid grip, making the Pad 3 portable without compromising on screen real estate. Button placement is also thoughtful: the power button is positioned on the top-right corner, while the volume buttons sit on the side. The USB-C charging port is located at the bottom, keeping cable management neat when using it in landscape mode with the keyboard. (For top technology news of the day, subscribe to our tech newsletter Today's Cache) This is a tablet that feels solid yet lightweight, built for both portability and performance. Display The 13.2-inch LCD LTPS display with 3.4K resolution (3392x2400) is one of the most impressive panels on an Android tablet today. With a 7:5 screen ratio and ultra-slim bezels (89.3% screen-to-body ratio), it hits the sweet spot between productivity and entertainment. Whether you're reading, editing, or binge-watching, the display offers crisp text, rich colours (DCI-P3 98% coverage), and smooth transitions thanks to its adaptive refresh rate of up to 144 Hz. Brightness levels go up to 900 nits in high brightness mode, so outdoor usability isn't an issue. Add to that a high touch sampling rate of 540Hz, making the display responsive too. But what really works in its favour is its utility. This is a display made for real work. Paired with the new keyboard, it handles multitasking like a pro. OS & AI Running OxygenOS 15 based on Android 15, the OnePlus Pad 3 offers a custom software experience that fully taps into its powerful hardware. At the core is Open Canvas, OnePlus' proprietary multitasking interface that shines on the Pad 3's expansive 13.2-inch screen. You can place up to three apps side by side, or have two in split screen with a third floating above or below—switching between them takes just a tap. A smart quick-access menu above each window lets you float, maximize, or switch apps instantly, making multitasking smooth and intuitive. Complementing this is a new app dock that slides up from the bottom to show recent apps, pinned shortcuts, and a drag-and-drop file browser for seamless interaction. Whether you're researching, editing content, or running complex workflows, Open Canvas makes the Android tablet experience genuinely productive. The tab also features new AI-powered tools. Open a document and you'll see a sidebar with smart features like translation and summaries. Circle to Search works on any screen, and pressing the AI key on the keyboard instantly launches Google Gemini. OnePlus AI is being integrated thoughtfully with the new products, with a focus on performance and productivity, not just flash. Performance The latest OnePlus Pad 3 is built like a flagship. It's powered by Snapdragon 8 Elite, paired with the Qualcomm Oryon CPU running at up to 4.32GHz, and the Adreno 830 GPU. This makes it one of the most powerful Android tablets on the market. You get RAM options of 12 GB (LPDDR5x) or 16 GB (faster LPDDR5T), along with UFS 4.0 storage in 256 GB or 512 GB variants. That's serious laptop-level power in a portable chassis. From streaming 4K content to gaming, multitasking, or editing large files, the Pad 3 can do it all. Thermal management is solid, and everything runs fast and fluid, even with multiple apps open. And if you're wondering whether the performance matches the polish, it absolutely does. On Geekbench, the Pad 3 scored an impressive 3,081 in single-core, 9,375 in multi-core, and a GPU score of 17,942. These numbers not only put it ahead of most Android tablets but even make it competitive with some ultrabooks and Apple's M-series iPads. From gaming to graphic-heavy apps, the Pad 3 keeps everything running smoothly. If you're serious about productivity on Android, no other tablet in this segment comes close. Camera Let's be real — no one buys a tablet for its camera, but that doesn't mean it should be bad. The Pad 3 features a 13 MP rear camera and an 8 MP front camera. The rear camera can shoot 4K at 30fps and supports Electronic Image Stabilization. This renders it more than capable for scanning documents, capturing whiteboards, or the occasional outdoor click. The front camera does a solid job for video calls — clear enough for work meetings and casual conversations. It won't blow your mind, but it gets the job done. Audio With an 8-speaker setup — 4 woofers and 4 tweeters — this tablet offers surprisingly immersive sound. Whether you're watching a film or on a video call, the audio is clear, rich, and impressively loud for a device this slim. Spatial audio support enhances the experience, making this tablet a decent portable cinema in a pinch. Battery Battery life is where the OnePlus Pad 3 flexes hard. With a 12,140 mAh cell, it comfortably lasts a full workday and then some. OnePlus claims a battery life of up to 17 hours, and in mixed-use scenarios (video, productivity, and browsing), one can get around 13–14 hours, which is still ahead of the curve. In comparison, even the latest iPad clocks in at around 10 hours. Charging is quick too, thanks to the 80 W SuperVOOC charging support, getting the tablet from near empty to full in under an hour. Verdict The OnePlus Pad 3 isn't trying to be just another Android tablet. It's trying to be your next laptop — and in many ways, it succeeds. With desktop-grade performance, a laptop-sized display, excellent multitasking software, and long battery life, it's built for serious users. Add in the optional keyboard, and it's a productivity powerhouse that easily doubles as an entertainment device. If you're looking for a premium Android tablet that can genuinely help you get work done — without compromising on style or speed — the OnePlus Pad 3 is one of the best options out there. It's not just a competitor to the iPad — it's a credible alternative. One caveat: I would have liked to see a SIM tray to take the value proposition of the OnePlus Pad 3 a notch higher, along with a bundled stylus. In the U.S., the Pad 3 retails for around $700. However, OnePlus is still figuring out its India pricing and has not revealed details yet.

The Tech Brand Putting Good Design At The Centre
The Tech Brand Putting Good Design At The Centre

Elle

time08-07-2025

  • Elle

The Tech Brand Putting Good Design At The Centre

There's nothing quite like slipping into a piece of clothing that fits so well, you'd think it was tailor-made for you. Imagine: it falls to the perfect length, offers just the right amount of stretch and features hidden pockets exactly where you need them. We all know the value of good design in our wardrobe – whether it's the perfect practical staple, a beautiful show-stopper, or the holy grail: those that combine both. Good design is also (we hope) abundant in your home, whether in your furniture choices, or the devices and appliances you use on a daily basis. Many of us give less consideration to the latter – we buy technology for the convenience it offers, not for aesthetics. But tech brand OnePlus believes that the two are intertwined. 'Whether it's a smartphone, tablet, or pair of earbuds, we're always staying grounded in what really matters to people,' says Celina Shi, chief marketing officer of OnePlus Europe. Take the OnePlus Nord 5, for example: epitomising the brand's commitment to purpose-driven design, it boasts an impressively thin 8.1mm form, is shaped with smoothed-out edges and is built to a super lightweight finish. All developments, Shi points out, that came in response to community wants: 'This device brings together sleek aesthetics and durability to give our users the practicality they want'. Here the idea of good design as a response to problem solving is clear as day – just as the raincoat became more compact to make corralling it around easier, so the OnePlus smartphone gets a slimmer finish to make it easier to hand. But it isn't all form and no functionality. Shi says that 'speed, intuitive design and efficiency' are at the heart of all the brand's choices – in keeping with its guiding mantra: never settle. As such the OnePlus Nord 5 has a new built-in AI system powered by an ultra-fast processor, speeding up tasks such as photo editing (you can remove unwanted objects in photos with a few taps of the magic eraser) and even shopping (circle any image and the AI will track it down through an intelligent search feature). The same can be said for the impressive OnePlus CE5 device, an equally sleek phone that's built to never back down. No, literally – its industry-leading battery power promises to keep you going for longer without reaching for a charging plug. That means business ticks along as usual during long commutes and late evenings. 'Our ethos is simple: to elevate everyday tasks and create a seamless user experience,' says Shi. This is evident throughout its range: the OnePlus Watch 3 43mm is a smartwatch that delivers intuitive fitness support in a compact package; the versatile OnePlus Pad 3 tablet is the on-the-go companion putting AI at your fingertips; and the OnePlus Buds 4 wireless earbuds are the adaptive wearables that take noise cancellation seriously. All three are characterised by an elegant, unfussy aesthetic, with clear thought given to how they work together to enhance the user experience. Where some innovations come as a direct response to practical needs (note the OnePlus Watch 3 43mm's slimmer strap offering a more secure fit on smaller wrists), others nod to the brand's own intuitive understanding of where the future of technology is going. A tablet that's built with a super fast OS system for work-turned-streaming on the go? It's a yes. Earbuds that deliver super-high quality sound and slip into even the teeniest of handbags? Sign us up. As Shi reiterates, 'Our approach has always been and will remain human-centric – a focus on designing technology that never settles in its commitment to real-world relevance.' It's no wonder then, that OnePlus' ecosystem of products are proving popular in a world that values good design. Explore the full range of OnePlus products

The OnePlus Pad Lite could be the perfect parental pick for their kid's first Android tablet
The OnePlus Pad Lite could be the perfect parental pick for their kid's first Android tablet

Stuff.tv

time08-07-2025

  • Stuff.tv

The OnePlus Pad Lite could be the perfect parental pick for their kid's first Android tablet

Having only just unleashed what is now comfortably one of the best tablets running Android, OnePlus is wasting no time in following it up with something a little kinder to your wallet. The OnePlus Pad Lite is also bringing a bespoke kid mode that could make it a top choice for tech-minded families. The 11in slate is a fair bit smaller than the OnePlus Pad 3, but doesn't skimp too much on screen specs in order to keep costs in check. You're still getting a 2K resolution stretched over a productivity-friendly 16:10 aspect ratio, along with a 90Hz refresh rate and 10-bit colour support. Underneath, power comes from a MediaTek Helio G100 – a hint that this is very much a mid-tier tab rather than a flagship model – paired to as much as 8GB of RAM and 256GB of on-board storage. OnePlus is talking a big game in terms of battery life, with a 9340mAh cell apparently able to manage a huge 54 days of standby time between charges. That translates to a more realistic 11 hours of video playback. 30W wired charging is on hand for relatively speedy top-ups. The firm has carried over its Open Canvas multitasking from its foldable phones, which is a big win for side-by-side working on several apps at once. It's still, for my money, the best of its kind on Android. The new kids mode will let parents restrict access to apps and set usage limits – and no, turning it off and on again won't exit back into the regular mode. Your 'I'm so clever' sprogs will still need you to put in a password. The OnePlus Pad Lite is up for pre-order right now, with prices starting from £199 in the UK and €229 in Europe. The LTE version will set you back £229/€259. Tablets should start shipping to early birds and go on general sale from the 15th of July. There was no confirmation of a US launch at the time of writing.

OnePlus Pad 3 Tablet Is Powerful and Elegant, but Its Higher Price Has Me Thinking Twice
OnePlus Pad 3 Tablet Is Powerful and Elegant, but Its Higher Price Has Me Thinking Twice

CNET

time26-06-2025

  • CNET

OnePlus Pad 3 Tablet Is Powerful and Elegant, but Its Higher Price Has Me Thinking Twice

8.2 / 10 SCORE OnePlus Pad 3 $700 at OnePlus Pros Impressively zippy overall performance Good battery life Sharp, bright display with 144Hz refresh rate for smooth scrolling and gaming Cons Fairly premium price LCD instead of OLED display No microSD card slot for expandable storage Disappointing front camera OnePlus Pad 3 8.2/10 CNET Score $700 at OnePlus Last year's OnePlus Pad 2 was considered one of the better tablet values, combining premium performance with a midrange price ($550) that would sometimes dip to $500. To a certain degree, the new-for-2025 OnePlus Pad 3 follows the same playbook. Equipped with a top-of-the-line Snapdragon 8 Elite processor and a bright, 13.2-inch, 3.4 K-resolution display with 315ppi pixel density and an adaptive refresh rate up to 144Hz, this is a high-performance Android tablet that gives off premium vibes for a lower price than Samsung's Galaxy Tab S10 Plus. At $700, though, it costs $150 more than the Pad 2, edging it into premium pricing territory and making it less of a bargain. It's available for preorder now with a choice of two "free gift" accessories as an incentive to purchase, and it ships on July 8. Simple yet sleek and slim The Pad 3, which includes 256GB of storage, 12GB of memory (RAM) and runs on Android 15 (you get three years of Android updates and six years of security patches), isn't particularly bold-looking, but I still found its svelte design impressive. Weighing 1.5 pounds (675 grams) and measuring 11.4 by 8.3 by 0.24 inches (289.6 by 209.7 by 6 millimeters), it has an aluminum-alloy unibody in an understated "storm" blue color. Like the Pad 2, the Pad 3 has a 7:5 aspect ratio that's different from the 16:10 aspect ratio found on many Android tablets. It's a little more of a square look, akin to Apple's iPad and iPad Air's 4:3 aspect ratio or the 11-inch iPad Pro's 3:2 aspect ratio. Some people prefer the squarer design, and the Pad 3's 7:5 aspect ratio is arguably a selling point. The 13-megapixel rear camera is more bland-looking than the camera that OnePlus features on its phones. But it's been moved from a central position on the back to the top-left corner -- or the right corner in portrait orientation -- which is probably a better spot for it. There's also an 8-megapixel front-facing camera that's fine, but nothing special. Enlarge Image The OnePlus Pad 3 with the new Smart Keyboard. Josh Goldman/CNET The Pad 3's 3,392x2,400-pixel LCD is sharp, but its black levels and contrast fall short of what you get with the superior OLED displays found on Samsung's high-end Galaxy Tab S10 Plus and S10 Ultra. (The Pad 3's contrast hits just 1,123:1 when displaying a checkerboard pattern.) On the bright side, literally, it shines with a whopping 600 nits for a whole-screen image and is rated to go up to 900 nits in a special high-brightness mode (I could only measure the brightness in standard mode). I also liked that the screen features a 144Hz refresh rate that makes for buttery scrolling and gaming. OnePlus Pad 3 Specifications Price as reviewed $699 + $199 keyboard case + $99 Stylo 2 Cameras 13MP rear, 8MP front Display 13.2-inch, 3.4K (315ppi), 144Hz (7-step adjustable), Dolby Vision, 12bpc, 900 nits CPU Snapdragon 8 Elite (Gen 1) Memory 12GB LPDDR5X GPU Adreno 830 Storage 256GB UFS 4.0 Networking Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 Battery 12,140 mAh, 80W charging Operating system Android 15, OxygenOS 15.0 (+3 OS updates and 6 years of security patches) While Samsung's more affordable version of the Galaxy Tab S10 Plus, the Tab S10 FE Plus, doesn't have the same aspect ratio at the Pad 3, it's got a 13.1-inch screen that uses LCD technology, is 6 millimeters thick, weighs 1.5 pounds (664 grams) and starts at $650, so it's in the same price class as the Pad 3 and probably it's most direct competitor. The Tab S10 FE Plus' screen refresh rate only hits 90Hz, so technically the Pad 3 has an edge there. And the Pad 3's Snapdragon Elite processor is significantly more powerful than the Tab S10 FE Plus' Samsung Exynos 1580 processor. Both Samsung's Galaxy Tab S10 and Tab S10 FE series have microSD expansion slots for adding more storage, while the Pad 3 has no expansion slot. You'll have to make do with the 256GB of built-in storage (which should be ample for most people). Enlarge Image The rear camera has been moved from the center of the device to the corner. Josh Goldman/CNET Incredibly zippy performance The OnePlus Pad 3 packs the best chipset for Android devices I've tested. The Snapdragon 8 Elite offers huge improvements on the already impressive Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset used in leading phones and tablets in 2024. The OnePlus Pad 3 puts up impressive performance numbers across benchmarks, with especially strong results from the GPU. The Pad 3's Geekbench 6 results saw it even beat the Windows-based Asus ProArt PZ13 ($1,300) in single-core performance, though it still lagged behind in multicore performance. When it came to graphics, though, the OnePlus Pad 3 achieved more than double the PZ13's scores in 3DMark's Steel Nomad Light and Wildlife Extreme tests. The tablet's larger footprint allowed OnePlus to pack in a sizable 34.8-square-centimeter graphene composite vapor chamber to dissipate heat, and it does its job admirably. Running the Steel Nomad Light Stress Test, which cycles the benchmark 20 times in a row, the OnePlus Pad 3 had 84.5% consistency and saw its CPU temperature rise from 28 degrees Celsius to just 31 degrees, one of the more impressive results I've seen. Enlarge Image The screen has a 7:5 aspect ratio. Josh Goldman/CNET All that speed lets the tablet run incredibly smoothly, with nary a hitch in everyday operation. It also easily handles heavy games, like Delta Force, while remaining comfortable to hold (heat-wise, not so much bulk-wise). The newer chip also gives the Pad 3 the edge over even gaming-focused devices like the Lenovo Legion Tab Gen 3. We were also impressed with the Tab 3's battery life. Its 12,140-mAh battery rocks, easily lasting through the workday for everyday tasks. And in our online streaming battery test with the display set to 50% brightness (measured at 125 nits), it ran for 16 hours and 20 minutes (it ran an additional 40 minutes after the display dimmed, giving it a total battery life of 17 hours). It can also recharge at up to 80 watts with the included charger, reaching full capacity in 92 minutes. Alas, the USB-C charging port isn't high-bandwidth, as it tops out at the USB 3.2 Gen 1 spec of 5Gbps. While camera performance has been impressive on OnePlus phones of late, the same can't be said of this tablet's cameras. Both the front and rear cameras are only mediocre, failing to offer very sharp or low-noise images. The tablet packs eight speakers (four for the low end and four for high frequencies), which would seem like a recipe for excellence. But the sound quality was only decent, not great -- basically what you'd expect from a premium tablet. Not surprisingly, the midrange, where vocals live, was the strongest, with voices sounding loud and clear. However, like with most tablets and laptops, the speakers just don't output a ton of bass, and you're not getting any semblance of surround sound. OnePlus Pad 3 accessories Samsung's Galaxy Tab S10 series tablets are pricey (the Tab S10 FE models could also be included in that statement, even though they're more affordable). But Samsung is always offering big discounts in its online store if you trade in an older tablet or another device. If you play your cards right, you can get several hundred dollars for an earlier Tab S series model to put toward the latest model. OnePlus only gives up to $100 for trade-ins in its online store, but it tends to throw in an accessory for "free" as a value-added incentive to buy the device. In the Pad 3's preorder window, which ends July 7, OnePlus is going a step further, allowing buyers to pick two of three accessories as "free gifts." The accessories available are a $49 folio case, the $199 OnePlus Pad 3 Smart Keyboard and the $99 OnePlus Stylo 2 (yes, the same stylus offered with the OnePlus Pad 2, but the other two accessories are new for the Pad 3). Given the choice of two accessories, I suspect most people would take the Smart Keyboard and the Stylo 2. And if only one accessory was available as a free gift, the Smart Keyboard would likely be the first choice. Enlarge Image A closer look at the keyboard. Josh Goldman/CNET The keyboard is pretty good, with a more tactile feel to the keys than the earlier version. OnePlus says the Pad 3 Smart Keyboard "has larger, spaced-out keycaps that give a PC-style feel, as well as a range of useful command keys and a dedicated AI button -- all while retaining the same massive trackpad. It can also be adjusted to between 110- and 165-degree angles and continues to support NFC transfers and instant magnetic connection." If I had a gripe, it was that the behavior of the trackpad is a little odd. The mouse movement wasn't perfectly smooth and was sometimes a little jumpy, struggling to detect nuance. This hampers its principal utility: fine control. We struggled to select text quickly and accurately. Using two fingers to scroll webpages, we found the trackpad often accidentally registered a click, and I ended up opening plenty of advertisements this way. In some cases, the trackpad actions don't even work. Google Docs wouldn't allow it to scroll pages, and many times I'd be clicking around the web and would come across something that I couldn't click on with the trackpad, so was forced to reach up and tap the screen. Note that while you can attach the keyboard case to the tablet magnetically, you can also detach it and use it wirelessly over Bluetooth (sometimes when the case was jostled, it detached a little too easily and had to be reattached). The Smart Keyboard is decent enough if included, but it isn't worth anywhere near its $200 price. I suspect OnePlus intends to heavily discount the keyboard or continue offering it as a free gift alongside the tablet, which is what it did with the Pad 2. The Stylo 2 stylus has a magnetic anchor point along its top edge, where it also charges the pen. This arrangement could use more work, as the stylus is easy to attach in the wrong position (it's not clearly demarcated), and it's all too easy to pop the stylus loose while moving the tablet into or out of a bag, even when it's attached correctly. The stylus is accurate and helps facilitate some interesting features, including the ability to write words into text fields on the tablet and have your handwriting converted into neat text (most pen-based tablets offer this feature). It supports a whopping 16,000 levels of sensitivity and has haptic feedback that helps simulate the feel of paper. But there's no getting past how smooth the screen's glass is. It just doesn't give that right amount of resistance to feel like paper. Should you get the OnePlus Pad 3? It's hard to say what the Pad 3 would have cost without the Trump administration's tariffs coming along, but it likely would've been $50 to $100 cheaper. So it goes. All things considered, the Pad 3 is still a decent value, particularly when you compare it to the Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE Plus, which retails for about $50 less but can't come close to matching the zippy performance that this model's Snapdragon Elite processor serves up. And it matches up quite well against Apple's similarly priced iPad Air M3, offering better specs in some areas and better overall performance, though iPadOS has some advantages over Android in general. The Pad 3 isn't quite ready to be a laptop replacement, which you could argue is the case for most Android tablets and iPads. For a true laptop replacement in a tablet form factor, Windows-based machines like Asus's aforementioned ProArt PZ13 or Microsoft's Surface Pro remain your best bet. But despite its small shortcomings, the OnePlus Pad 3 is one of the best premium Android tablets and certainly makes for an excellent entertainment device, offering strong performance for gaming (it's also well-suited for Xbox Cloud Gaming) and light productivity. Geekbench 6 (Android version) Single Core OnePlus Tab 3 3,076.5 Lenovo Legion Tab Gen 3 2,228 Samsung Galaxy Tab S10+ 2,127 Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE+ 1,259 OnePlus Pad 2 958 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance. Geekbench 6 (Android version) Multicore) OnePlus Tab 3 9,021.5 Samsung Galaxy Tab S10+ 7,126 Lenovo Legion Tab Gen 3 6,600 OnePlus Pad 2 4,610 Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE+ 3,871 Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

The OnePlus Pad 3 is still up for pre-order with two lovely freebies worth $300
The OnePlus Pad 3 is still up for pre-order with two lovely freebies worth $300

Phone Arena

time25-06-2025

  • Business
  • Phone Arena

The OnePlus Pad 3 is still up for pre-order with two lovely freebies worth $300

In case you missed it, the OnePlus Pad 3—OnePlus' latest iPad Pro rival—is still up for pre-order, and it comes with not one but two killer freebies. For $699.99, you get the premium Android tablet plus a keyboard and stylus, all at no extra cost. Gift The impressive OnePlus Pad 3 is powered by the high-end Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, offering insanely good performance. Its display and battery life are just as awesome, making it a solid iPad Pro alternative. The best part about it is that you can still pre-order it with two free gifts: a keyboard and a stylus with a total value of $299.98. Buy at OnePlus Let's put some context here. First of all, the pre-order deal launched in early June. Secondly—the freebies in question aren't just some throwaway gadgets. In fact, they cost a total of $299.98 ($199.99 for the keyboard and $99.99 for the stylus). Also, you can save on the tablet by trading in an eligible device in good condition. Not into the keyboard or stylus? You can swap one out for a $39.99 folio case instead—at no extra cost. Honestly, the complete bundle seems like the much better promo, but to each their own. As noted in our OnePlus Pad 3 review, this is a really solid device you should have on your radar. It boasts a gorgeous 13.2-inch display with an absolutely stunning 3.4K resolution and a snappy 144Hz adaptive refresh rate. Sure, it uses an LCD panel, but hey—it gets plenty bright for comfortable outdoor use, and the sharp resolution makes everything pop. On top of that, the OnePlus tablet actually outperforms the Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra in synthetic benchmark tests. Yep, this $700 tablet is more powerful than the $1,000+ flagship Samsung tablet! With a Snapdragon 8 Elite inside, the device punches way above its price point, easily handling demanding apps, multitasking, and even high-end gaming with room to of that, coupled with a massive 12,140 mAh battery, is encased in a super-thin 5.97mm chassis, making this one of the slimmest tablets on the market. That said, it's a bit heavy, weighing some 1.49 lbs, but that's certainly not a dealbreaker. However you look at it, the OnePlus Pad 3 is an overwhelmingly powerful, slim tablet that's definitely worth your attention. If you still haven't pre-ordered a unit, now's the time to do it and receive two freebies worth almost $300. Shipping is set to begin in 14 days. Secure your connection now at a bargain price! We may earn a commission if you make a purchase Check Out The Offer

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store