The latest low-price Nord struggles to stand out.
Pros
- Solid build
- Strong battery life
- Decent main camera
Cons
- Poor value
- LCD not OLED
- No ultrawide camera
Our Verdict
The OnePlus line-up has grown increasingly convoluted in 2022. You might assume that the OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G shares a good deal of DNA with the OnePlus Nord CE 2 5G before it, but you’d be wrong.
This new entrant to the affordable mid-range market is a completely different kettle of fish with a different spec list, yet the price tag falls just £20 short of its almost-identically-named brother. OnePlus is effectively competing with itself, which is somewhat confusing.
While it’s an undoubtedly solid phone, the OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G lacks the flair, poise, and sense of value of other OnePlus phones. It’s a bit drab and a bit overpriced.
Design & Build
- Heavier than the Nord CE 2
- Attractive blue option
- Headphone jack
The OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G is a bigger and heavier phone than the OnePlus Nord CE 2 5G. You wouldn’t call it unwieldy, but at 8.5mm thick and with a weight of 195g, it certainly defies any lightweight expectations you might have based on its all-plastic construction.
The rear of the phone has a pretty generic layout and shape, with the usual curved back panel and oblong camera module.
Two details provide some interest. One is the Blue Tide colour of my test model, which appears to shift from a deep blue to an almost turquoise shade, with bright yellowy highlights. There’s also a Black Dusk model if you insist on a stealthier look.
There’s a side-mounted fingerprint sensor underneath the power button, which is nice and reliable. The bottom edge of the phone is packed with a USB-C port, 3.5mm headphone jack, and a slightly puny mono speaker.
Display
- 6.59in IPS LCD
- FHD+
- 120Hz
The Nord CE 2 Lite steps away from the dependable display used in the Nord CE 2 and other Nord handsets, and that’s a bit of a downer.
Rather than its brother’s 6.43in AMOLED, what you get is a 6.59in IPS LCD. Yes, that means it’s bigger. It’s also smoother, with a 120Hz refresh rate rather than the Nord CE 2’s 90Hz.
Both displays have FHD+ resolutions, but the IPS LCD used here doesn’t output anything like the same vibrant colours or deep blacks as the CE 2. It simply doesn’t look as premium.
In the screen’s default Vivid screen colour mode, I recorded a gamut coverage of 99.6% sRGB, 80.8% Adobe RGB, and 97% DCI P3, which isn’t bad. However, you’ll want to switch to the Normal colour mode if you want to optimise the balance and accuracy of that output.
When you consider that the Poco X4 Pro 5G gives you a 6.67in 120Hz AMOLED display for even less money, the Nord CE 2 Lite’s screen really isn’t anything to write home about.
Specs & Performance
- Snapdragon 695 5G
- 6GB RAM
- microSD slot
The OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite runs on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 695 5G, which is the same low-end chip that powers the similarly priced Poco X4 Pro 5G. This is backed by 6GB of RAM, though that can be expanded on the fly by up to 5GB of temporary virtual RAM.
It’s a set-up that helps the CE 2 Lite feel reasonably fast and fluid in general navigation. It can even handle more advanced tasks reasonably well. Genshin Impact remains playable, if far from silky smooth, on High/60fps settings.
In benchmark tests the phone falls a little behind the OnePlus Nord CE 2, both in CPU and GPU terms. It’s more or less equal to the Poco X4 Pro, as you’d expect given the identical components.
On the storage front you get 128GB as standard, plus the added bonus of a microSD slot.
Camera
- Solid 64Mp main
- Very average macro and depth lenses
- No ultrawide
OnePlus has packed this cheap phone with one of those triple camera systems that’s really a single-camera system. You get a 64Mp main wide angle sensor, which is all well and good, but then a 2Mp macro and a 2Mp depth sensor that don’t really do very much.
In other words, it’s a similar set-up to the Nord CE 2, minus the ultrawide. As with that phone, the Nord CE 2 Lite mostly delivers the goods in decent lighting.
Colours are deep and vibrant without looking totally false, detail is good, and dynamic range is on point. It’s pretty much all you could want at this price.
It struggles a little once the light drops, where the smaller sensor and lack of optical image stabilisation (OIS) start to bite, but I still obtained usable results with the provided Night mode.
There’s no dedicated telephoto camera but that main sensor is sufficiently pixel-dense to make digitally cropped 2x shots look passable. It’s that ultrawide omission that really bites here.
Around front is a 16MP selfie camera, which struggles a little with exposure and with a certain softness, but is otherwise passable.
Video recording only extends to 1080p and 30fps. That falls well short of the Nord CE 2 and its 4K at 30fps or 1080p at 120fps.
Battery Life & Charging
- 5000mAh
- Two day phone with light use
- 51% charge in 30 minutes
OnePlus has equipped its affordable phone with a 5000mAh battery, which matches the Poco X4 Pro 5G and exceeds the non-Lite model.
It’s sufficient to drive the OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G through a full day of moderate usage (3 hours 30 minutes of screen on time) with more than 50% to spare. That’s a strong result, though the Poco X4 Pro 5G achieved something similar.
For some reason, the PCMark Work 3.0 battery test repeatedly failed to complete during my time with the OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G, so I can’t offer up any of the usual benchmark comparisons.
On the recharging front, OnePlus packs its phone with a 33W charger. This will get you from 0 to 51% in 30 minutes, and will get you to 100% within 1 hour 15 minutes.
It should be noted that the OnePlus Nord CE 2 5G gives you a 65W charger for just a little more money, while the Poco X4 Pro 5G gives you a 67W charger for a little less.
Software
- Android 12
- OxygenOS 12.1
- Only two Android updates
The OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G ships with Android 12 and the company’s custom OxygenOS 12.1 slapped on top.
The latter isn’t quite the boldly independent Android UI it used to be, with Oppo’s takeover essentially rendering it a different version of its own ColorOS. But it retains its attractive fonts and icons, at least, and it’s nice and smooth to use.
I’m not a huge fan of the OnePlus Shelf, a widget-filled menu that’s accessed by dragging down from the top right of the screen. It looks a little clumsy, and it feels weirdly divorced from the rest of the UI. Still, at least it’s possible to deactivate within the Settings menu.
OnePlus is promising two major Android updates and three years of security updates. That’s about as good as it gets at this end of the market, and should see the phone through to Android 14.
Price & Availability
The OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G is available from the OnePlus website and Amazon in the UK. The sole model available in the UK retails for £279, which gets you 6GB RAM and 128GB storage as standard.
In Europe it is on sale from OnePlus in France for €319 and in Spain for €309.
It’s also on sale in India for ₹19,999 direct from OnePlus.
While this places the OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G well and truly into the affordable phone category, it somehow still feels a tad overpriced. The likes of the Poxo X4 Pro 5G and the Realme 9 5G are similarly specced, but cost £20 to £30 less.
Perhaps more problematic is the challenge from within. The OnePlus Nord 2 CE 5G is a flat-out better phone in most of the ways that count, yet it only costs £20 more.
Check out our best budget phones and best mid-range phones articles for more challengers.
Verdict
The OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G is another highly competent affordable phone from a now established brand.
It’s solidly built, has a fluid 120Hz display, and runs reasonably smoothly. The 64Mp main camera, meanwhile, is capable of capturing images with real pop.
However, there’s no getting away from the fact that this is one of the least exciting OnePlus phones we’ve seen for some time. In certain ways, it feels downright unnecessary.
For just £20 less than the OnePlus Nord CE 2 you’re getting a phone with an inferior LCD display, inferior performance, slower charging, and a less flexible camera system. Meanwhile, rival efforts from Xiaomi and Realme provide similar or even slightly better specifications for less money.
Specs
- Android 12, OxygenOS 12.1
- 6.59in, FHD+, IPS LCD, 120Hz, flat display
- Side-mounted fingerprint sensor
- Qualcomm Snapdragon 695 5G
- 6GB LPDDR4X RAM
- 128GB storage
- 64MP, f/1.7 main camera
- 2MP, f/2.4 macro camera
- 2MP, f/2.4 depth sensor
- Up to 1080p @ 30fps rear video
- 16Mp front-facing camera
- Mono speaker
- Dual-SIM
- Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac
- Bluetooth 5.2
- 5000mAh battery
- 33W charging
- 164.3 x 75.6 x 8.5mm
- 195g
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