It features the identical Optic AMOLED display, the same Sony IMX298 rear camera sensor, and the same Dash Charge technology as its predecessor.
This exclusive edition of the phone went on sale in Paris at a Colette store on 21 March 2017.
[9] Users can also purchase the same protective covers in Bamboo, Rosewood, Black Apricot, Karbon and Sandstone,[10] which takes care of the camera hump and evens it with the phone.
It features the same Optic AMOLED display with Corning Gorilla Glass 4 protection, in the same casing of the OnePlus 3.
It includes NFC and the same fast finger scanner which can unlock the device in approximately 0.3 seconds.
The phone has an upgraded front-facing Samsung 3P8SP sensor with 16 MP, 1.0 μm, f/2.0 and EIS.
The phone comes with a faster Qualcomm Snapdragon 821 processor and a bigger 3400 mAh battery.
[18] A major stable update (still based on Android 7.1.1 Nougat) was released on 25 September 2017, as OxygenOS version 4.5.0.
[33] This came as a bit of a shock to much of the Android enthusiast community, as every major manufacturer had removed their benchmark cheating code following the massive backlash that occurred when it was originally discovered on other devices in 2013.
[34][35] OnePlus immediately stated that they would be removing the benchmark cheating from future software versions, and that they weren't sure how it made it into a production build.