The vanilla Reno11 is built around a 6.7” OLED screen with 1080p resolution. The 10-bit screen supports 120 Hz refresh rate and 240 Hz touch sampling rate. The front has a punch hole for the selfie camera, slightly curved sides for better handling and a fingerprint scanner under the display. The chipset is Dimensity 8200 by Mediatek, which Oppo used in the Reno10 Pro, but is still an upgrade for the vanilla member of the series.
The Reno11 employs the 50 MP Sony LYT600
sensor for the main camera on the back. The shooter has an f/1.8 aperture,
autofocus and OIS. It's joined by a 32 MP portrait cam with 2x zoom. The third
cam is a basic 8 MP ultra-wide shooter with 112 degrees FoV. The selfie camera
is the good old 32 MP shooter that has been a part of every Reno and Find X
smartphone in the past three years.
Battery capacity is 4,800 mAh, which is
about 5% more than what it used to be in the Reno10 phones. Top charging speed
is 67W, which is a downgrade on paper, but Oppo still says it takes 19 minutes
for the phone to get from 0 to 50%. The phone is shipping with Color OS 14 out
of the box and also has NFC support. It does not have a 3.5 mm audio jack or a
micro SD slot, but the card tray has room for two nano-SIM cards.
Oppo Reno11 comes in Black, Green, or
White colors. Prices in China are CNY 2,499 (US$ 350/€ 320) for the 8/256 GB
version, CNY 2,799 (US$ 390/€ 360) for the 12/256 GB option and CNY 2,999
(US$ 420/€ 385) for the 12/512 GB variant. Pre-orders are live, with actual sales
scheduled to start on November 25.