OnePlus Nord N10 5G brings the most affordable premium 5G experience to the market. It brings the power of 5G to more consumers along with burdenless user experience, 90 Hz smooth display, Warp charge 30T, and high-quality quad-camera performance.
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Reyce Knutson –
I love this phone. I have T-Mobile and it fired right up after swapping over my SIM. Ever since my “water-resistant up to three feet deep” iPhone 7 died aafterslipping into a 1-inch puddle, I’ve steered away from expensive flagship phones, and Apple especially. My last phone was an LG Stylo 4 32 gb, and I had it for a couple of years. I really needed more storage though, so I started browsing and I narrowed down my choices to this OnePlus and the Samsung Galaxy S20 5G, which still looks very appealing. The difference maker for me was the better camera on the Nord N10, and the lower cost. Samsung Galaxy has a slightly higher screen refresh rate and it’s marketed as water resistant, but for nearly $300 more. This phone takes amazing photos, is lightning fast, and was super easy to setup with my previous Google account. It even installed the apps and wallpaper customization exactly how I had it on my old phone.
Some have complained about deceptive advertising concerning a dual SIM slot, however, when I thoroughly reviewed this phone and all the specs, I never saw any listing or feature that included a dual SIM, only a SIM slot and an micro SD slot for expanded storage.
This phone has crisp resolution, great battery (I usually end the day with about 50-65% with 3-4 hours of total use), and I like the screen size. The fingerprint reader works better than my last phone, and you can also do facial recognition if you want. Absolutely outatanding phone for the cost.
Christopher –
I just received my cellphone today and be everything is awesome, price, data speed, processor, display, some buyers said they speakers are terrible, this use not a radio is s cellphone the speakers worked fine, after 2 weeks of using I can said the speakers are normal like any other phone in $900 range, other said don’t have double sim yes but you have sim card and storage card up 512 Gb. Cameras are nice also and all for $299. Any phone is in this low price any phone. Really s good cellphone I recommend. Better than Xiaomy note 10, better than Huawei, better than Samsung (compared with some in that range price), andv any brand you can describe. Arrived in 2 days, I bought Saturday and arrived Monday 4 pm. The setting was way synchronize old phone too new one in 15 minutes. And more than 120 applications updated and software upgraded. Battery life using 1/2 day and 77% left, charged from 40% to 100% in 30′. Tell me what phone with $299 give you all this? NFC so you can paid with your phone. Also my mint mobile SIM cards works fantastic and my memory card of 512 Gb you can storage massive photos and documents, music directly in my phone. Face recognition, finger recognition also. Etc. Etc. Etc. March 2021 I love my phone, just amazing with all. Charging time from 17 % to 100% in just 30 minutes.
Orangebang –
I’ve been using Samsung since the Note 2. Every iteration of Note or Galaxy since. I broke the screen on my most recent galaxy and didn’t feel like spending another $600-800 on the new unlocked model, so I looked into a cheap phone. Man, I’m so happy with this. It comes with a case, a warp charger and cable, and I’ve been so happy with it for the last couple months. I use my phone a lot. I’m on it from 8AM, watching videos, streaming music, browsing IG, and I use it for GPS for an hour or so throughout the day. I can go until 10PM before having to charge. This battery is huge. The LED screen is not as bright at all angles, but I look at my phone straight on, so that’s not an issue. Not as vibrant as my samsung screen. The alarm clock was the hardest to get used to. I got so used to Samsung alerts, this thing makes all different noises. Hard to get used to after 9 years on a samsung. The one complaint I have is the video. I can’t replay the videos I record in slow motion or scroll through the video. Otherwise, the photos are okay, browser is lightning fast, no delays in IG, my phone reception is better on AT&T than my unlocked samsungs. I do accidentally push the mute with my cheek while on calls, which shouldn’t be happening. It happens a lot. Oh yeah, for some reason, One Plus makes the digit “1” on their clock on their GUI red, while the other numbers are white. If you have any sort of wallpaper that’s not black or white, you’ll be confused and have to double take. This is lame, and cannot be turned off easily without downloading stuff and changing things around with 3rd party support. The phone charges really fast with their “warp charger”. From 15% to full in around an hour. I’m very amazed what kind of product I can get for half the price of a samsung nowadays. We’re at a point in time where lesser technologies have caught up to brand new tech, and the discrepancy between the two is minute, even tho on paper it looks extreme. If the camera / video is not a huge priority to you (meaning you don’t need the best of the best), buy one, you get used to it quickly.
Alex –
Problems: 1. The wifi is constantly switching from source to source as I move around my neighborhood. I pass government buildings that have public wifi near them and the local cable company has started providing free wifi that I pass through on walks or bike rides. (and yes, I have found and turned off the open network notification setting but it still notifies me and tries to grab the new wifi. This phone cannot decide which wifi it likes and will switch back and forth even if I’m seated. The switches are not seamless, they are 30 seconds or so of total interruption to service, no wifi and no phone service, period. When it switches the phone does not have data or LTE service. It does not go to LTE between wifi sources. If I turn wifi off, the phone loses cellular service as I move about, it seems to have the same issue of switching between sources. Also, if I turn wifi off the phone still notifies me that wifi is available with the default notification sound (there is no way to turn this notification sound off, there is no related app, apparently the local cable company’s self promotion “free” wifi service can override the phone with these pop-in pop-up ads for the (temporarily) free public wifi as I move from block to block passing through the unlocked wifi sources which leads me to problem 2. 2. Notification sounds. Set the default notification sound to None then set the sound for your texting app or else do what I did. I went through each app and each apps multiple sub parts and picked through several levels of choices to change the notification sound to none. I had the first OnePlus phone and swore I’d never use them again because then they had 3 operating systems, Android, Cyanogen, and Oxygen. The problem then was that the wifi did not work and the bluetooth did not work. I recall that I rooted the phone and used just the base android which solved those issues but it was more frustration and a lot of time as my understanding of and interest in phones is small. I bought this phone thinking it is always good to forgive and forget. Well, maybe not. 3. A third problem I just recalled, I was at home yesterday trying to put my passwords for myriad sites in order, upgrading passwords, eliminating duplicates, recording them in my password app, and so on. I was challenged by various sites which were sending me texts. I got some texts but most were delayed or I was told my phone was not available. One might not notice this in day to day use as some of the texts showed up later, not at all, or out of order. This was from different sources so the problem is my carrier or this phone. I tried my other cell lines/phones with the same carrier and they did not have the text dropouts/delays. OTHERWISE, nice phone, good screen, pretty colors, nice sound. If your fingerprint does not work well delete it and start over with the part of your finger that naturally touches the phone first, not the middle of your fingerprint. The phone has trouble with fingerprints, it thinks the screen is dirty and it says it is going to record the edges of the fingerprint but it does not so if you start with the middle of your print you may end up without the corner of the tip that in actual use touches the reader first.
🌼Gypsy Dawn🌼 –
Thing I like About the phone-
-Good amount of storage space
-Cons
I really tried liking this phone. After several months of really research to find a phone that fit my needs I decided to get this one after lots of comparing to leading brands. First off the touch screen sensor isn’t always accurate. I find myself constantly repeatingly pressing the same keys just for it to register.
I have to reboot the phone often through the day to get it to work properly to do simple tasks. Sometimes the phone drops cellular connections while I’m out and about and does the same while using wifi too. I have to disconnect and reconnect my wifi on the phone which is very annoying.
Second- sometimes it’s hard to get Bluetooth to connect to my devices like my laptop and earbuds.
3rd- it doesn’t load pages well like it should for it to have a high refresh rate 90hz. It’s not as smooth loading as advertised. Can get laggy!!
4th- the camera just downright sucks which I knew wasn’t the best but man it’s worse than expected compared to my old cheap Walmart phone. It’s very fuzzy like an old Fashion tv that needs to use the bunny ear annetana to get an ok picture. If the lighting isn’t bright it takes bad photos.
5th- The charger can overheat too and the device gets hot at times ….like really hot when just using it for games like candy crush or bingo games.
And lastly……people have a hard time hearing me while using the phone both on speaker and just using it up to my ear. I have to repeat myself constantly.
I’ve done a trouble shooting with Amazon but nothing changed. I did factory reset and still same results. For it to be $300 phone it shouldn’t have this many issues. My $100 Lg that I’ve been using for 4 years…its just a cheap Walmart phone and it blows this one out of the water in comparison. I feel very let down by this device since I really took 5 month of really hard looking, comparing and weighing out pros and cons for phones that I was really interested in. Amazon sent me some brand phone but other issues started up like freezing up, disconnecting from cellular connections and wifi,slow loading and bad fingerprint sensor. Believe me and other reviewers….this phone is definitely a step down from the PLUS ONE NORD 9 that I wish I got instead of this one but I’m on a budget and NORD 9 VERSION is a bit more that I can afford at the moment. I’ll be returning this phone and going back to finding my phone that suits me and my needs and functional
Scharfschutzen –
I own a OnePlus 7 Pro. I bought this for my wife. While it’s not on-par with the 7 Pro, this phone is absolutely great for the price. It feels very premium and is SUPER fast. I mean it feels as fast as my 7 Pro. When I install apps, it’s almost instantaneous. I play a couple of games and they actually run smoother than my 7 Pro (I think this has a better GPU.) The fingerprint scanner is very fast, although I prefer the front (under the glass) scanner more. The battery life is much better than my 7 Pro; I’ll typically get two days or more without charging, but I’m also not a heavy user. The camera setup isn’t as good, but for the price, it’s not as bad as some other “budget” phones. Warp charging is still excellent. My only gripe is the phone doesn’t come with a case or screen protector, but they had to cut costs somewhere. The antennas aren’t as good a the 7 Pro, but are much better than some other phones I’ve used. Screen is very bright and sharp and I have high expectations.
Hotlog –
I’ve had this phone since March. I wanted to let it really stretch it’s legs before reviewing. As initial reactions don’t paint a good picture of something you’ll have for a few years.
For $300 you get a lot of phone for your money. Using Mint Mobile and getting T-Mobile’s 5G is what brought me to this phone. Connectivity is good but, I’m sure the network could be better. 5G is still very new.
The Oxygen OS is very nice. A little bit of things you can’t change but, I believe you could. I’ve not fully explored everything option. I feel you can do more to get how you like. Little bloatware but, there’s some.
Fingerprint sensor is annoying. I just found out after trying to unlock my phone while the screen is off, that you have to wake it up or get to the lock screen. So, I just shake my phone until I see the clock and then touch the sensor. Other phones weren’t like this, so I gave it a low score.
The screen is good, sound is good and is performance. Good, not great.
How’s it holding up? Great actually! I’ve had it slide in between the gap between the seat and the console and get under the seat in my car. A few scratches near the charging port. To be expected with plastic. Speaking of the body, it’s not black with an iridescent glare like the photos lead you believe. The phone is blue. Not flat or matte and has a shimmer effect. Which is nice. Though, would prefer the black with the iridescent to be honest.
Camera? Get’s the job done. Uses some AI to clean things up. Not the worst thing but, it’s nothing high end.
Other than more updates, it’s a good phone and fits the majority of what I need a phone to do.
John –
I think this phone is much better than it’s $300 price point might lead you to believe. 6GB/128GB plus MicroSD support up to 512 GB. A quick processor, 90Hz scrolling on a Full-HD screen with Gorilla Glass. 5G capable (Mostly on T-Mobile) with NFC and a headphone jack, plus a pretty decent array of cameras. I’m a light user and I get 2 days of battery minimum, and the included Warp charger will take it from 25 to 100% in about 45-50 minutes. I believe Oneplus claims you can take it from basically dead to a days worth of charge in 30 minutes using Warp. That the charger is included shouldn’t be taken for granted considering it makes for faster recover time, and also that certain manufacturers, such as Samsung and Apple, have quit including them on some models. I gave the fingerprint reader four stars instead of five because it doesn’t often work for me. I didn’t discount it more because I’m taking into account my age of 62. As you get older, your skin becomes thinner and that makes it harder for scanners to read your prints. I’ve got scanners on a Galaxy Note 9, a wall safe, an exterior garage door opener, and laptops that are all glitchy and often don’t work. The safe manufacturer actually warned buyers 50+ not to rely on the scanner. Your results may be different, particularly if you live in a humid vs. dry environment, health, etc. When it does work, I like the position on the back vs. the front, but that’s just personal preference. The phone seems a little slick to hold on it’s own, but that doesn’t matter to me as I immediately put it in a clear, flexible plastic bump case for protection. I can easily do without wireless charging with the battery life and charge speed. I guess the one thing I wish it had was IP67/68 water protection, but you’re not going to get everything under the sun for $300. Considering you could buy three or four of these for the same money as the latest flagship Galaxy or iPhone, maybe that’s not so bad. I know those phone are faster, better cameras, flashier, etc., but all things considered, I feel really good about this purchase.
Flick –
Completely worth the asking price. It’s a solid device with great performance for $300. The battery life is respectable. My usage will get me about two and a half days out of a charge (mostly light gaming, reading, texting, and some music streaming).
My last device was a pixel 3. In comparisons, the screen is good, but the colors are not as rich. The cameras performance is good, but not amazing. Full light photos are good with great detail and nice pixel saturation, possibly on par with my pixel 3. Low light situations are where it starts to fall off. Medium light is still workable with some tweaking of the settings and dialing in. Not too hard or consuming to do, honestly pretty easy. Low light, the pixel just wins. With some work, you can get passable photos with the N10, but not quite what the pixel can do. I dunno what wizardry Google does, but they kill it with their setup.
Day to day usage, I’m happy with the performance of the N10. The Oxygen OS is smooth and easy to work with, actually not really that different from a clean base Android. I appreciate that OnePlus is always updating and improving it. The processor is ample and there is plenty of RAM to keep things running fluidly. I’m on Verizon, so I don’t have 5g to be able to comment. That wasn’t one of my requirements in the first place.
The design and physical attributes are a mixed bag for me. It’s a pretty thin design for what it houses. It’s tall and narrow, but the aspect ratio works for it. The hole punch screen is interesting to me. I’m getting used to it and kinda like it. There is a setting that sets the margin of the screen to exclude it from the display area should you not like the appearance of it. I like the extra 4mm of display, personally. The physical buttons are responsive and give a good “click” feeling when pressed. My only complaint is how the volume keys are on the opposite side from the power button. I find myself taking accidental screen shots too often because of this. Again, it also shows that the buttons operate very nicely.
All in all, I’m happy with the performance of the OnePlus Nord N10. It’s completely worth the asking price and has performance that would be worth a lot more in other brands flagships. To me, it’s positives far outweigh the class. No regrets in my purchase as I would buy the OnePlus Nord N10 again.
*Update 4/15/21* Still pleased with the N10. It’s still a solid performer for the price. The only negative I have found is that sometimes the fingerprint sensor it a little twitchy. On occasion, it won’t pick up my fingers. A quick screen off and back on or just unlock with pin entry.
Michael Achorn –
I’m probably not the best person to review a phone. I’m old school, I don’t spend every waking moment staring at my phone. I don’t play video games on it, have a Tik Tok account, Instagram, or really any other brain rotting apps. For my use, it’s an excellent phone. Setup was easy, I just removed my Sim card and MicroSD card, inserted them into the Nord N10 and the phone worked. It has 5G, connects to WiFi, and has a great battery life. Calls are clear, listening to music or watching videos on the device is fine with dual speakers, 90Hz screen refresh rate makes the screen snappy and responsive. I bought this to replace an aging LG G4 phone I got in 2015. It has double the ram and 4 times the internal memory, at half the cost. It doesn’t bother me that it doesn’t have an OLED screen, or a wireless charger. I do wish the camera was better, but that’s about it. I knew what I was buying, and I feel it is worth the money I paid for it.