Oppo, for the most part, has been pushing the breaking points of PDA plan, and that example isn't stopping with the F9 Pro. It was just a large portion of multi month back that we saw the truly bezel-less Find X

mobile phone arrive. With its 93.8 percent screen-to-body extent and its fly out camera module, it was an invigorating new arrangement that out of the blue made each other pioneer mobile phone just feel old. At the point when there's no making tracks in an opposite direction from the indent, the Find X was a truly necessary boost. The Oppo F9 Pro, while it doesn't have an awesome time insignificant fly up camera, does at any rate drive the breaking points of diagram with incredibly, one additionally stimulating new glass back and an extraordinary "waterdrop indent".
Quickly, you see its exquisite screen with irrelevant bezels, by virtue of that indent, and the blue-dull shining back with its valuable stone model. That back is shocking to look at from any point.

Much the same as the Oppo Find X before it, the Oppo F9 Pro has an admirable screen-to-body extent of 90.8 percent (the iPhone X's extent stays at a unimportant 82 percent). The F9 Pro has a score, which the Find X didn't have. In any case, the score is little to the point that it hardly seems to exist. It's a little drop on an uncommonly fulfilling screen.


The twofold camera sits at the upper left in an even outline, close by a LED-streak. The extraordinary stamp scanner blends in with the incline shading and would have been obscure from the back notwithstanding those physical dejections.

The Oppo F9 Pro has a 6.3-inch IPS FHD+ LCD appear with 2340 x 1080 pixels and Corning Gorilla Glass 6 for confirmation. The unobtrusive score on the best and little catch gives the phone a 90.8 percent screen-to-body extent. The earpiece sits over the score at the particular edge where the exhibit meets the best packaging.

To the degree hardware goes, the F9 Pro has a Helio P60 chipset nearby 6 GB of RAM, and 64 GB of inside accumulating. The limit can be stretched out to 256 GB using a microSD card. The phone has the Android 8.1 Oreo on it with Oppo's ColorOS UI racing to complete the process of everything.



As I've said before in my before overviews, if it's not stock Android or close stock Android (read Oxygen OS) by then the prohibitive OS shouldn't in any occasion be stacked with bloatware. Oppo's Color OS 5.2 UI which continues running on Android 8.1 Oreo is exceptionally similar to Vivo's FunTouch, Xiaomi's MIUI or Samsung Experience similar to bloatware

What is bloatware you ask? It is that reliable "Sign in to Your Oppo ID" over the settings menu in spite of the way that I genuinely would incline toward not to sign in. It's those Music, Gallery and Phone Manager images that I don't use and moreover can't move from their settled positions on the home screen. It's that annoying splendid helper that will constantly remain there on the home screen and can't be hindered.