Oppo has already announced that its next flagship smartphone, coming out in the first three months of 2021, will be powered by the newly unveiled Snapdragon 888 chipset, but today a new leak gives us a few more details about the device.
The Find X3 Pro, which is what we assume
it will be called, is codenamed Fussi, according to Evan Blass, better known as
@evleaks. The device will have a 6.7-inch 1440x3216 touchscreen with 1.07
billion color support and adaptive dynamic frame rate - from 10 Hz all the way
up to 120 Hz.
The billion colors is not new, the Find X2
Pro introduced that feature in the smartphone world, and it will be reprised
here, while the dynamic refresh rate is akin to what Samsung's done for the
Galaxy Note20 Ultra (although we're expecting the Find X3 Pro to support that
at its full resolution).
On the rear there will apparently be a
pair of new 50 MP Sony IMX766 sensors, one for the primary shooter, and the
other for the ultrawide, along with a 13 MP snapper capable of 2x optical zoom
and a 3 MP macro camera with lights circling its lens, thus enabling it to
function "as a de facto microscope". That's... weird, and not
something we've seen before, although there's no mention of an additional
periscope zoom camera in this leak which is even weirder considering the Find
X2 Pro had such a thing. That's not to say it won't be included, just that we
don't have any details about it yet.
The Find X3 Pro is allegedly going to
weigh about 190g, with both the screen and the rear being curved towards the
frame. The back will be either ceramic or glass, and for color options, we'll
get black and blue initially, with white coming later.
The phone will get a 4,500 mAh battery
with 65W SuperVOOC 2.0 wired charging, and 30W VOOC Air wireless charging (a
notable omission from the Find X2 Pro). The NFC module will have a dual-body
antenna design, which will let you tap to pay with either the back towards the
reader or the front. Unsurprisingly, the Find X3 Pro is said to debut running
ColorOS 11 based on Android 11.
Meanwhile, a similar leak popped up on Weibo.
The details are pretty much the same as those by Blass, which means either
Digital Chat Station is reporting the same stuff to his Chinese audience or he
is using the same source, confirming pretty much everything we already
mentioned.