Starting at Rs 31,999, the OnePlus Nord 5 offers a reliable mid-range experience that focuses on refinement over reinvention. Its 6,800mAh battery holds strong through daily use, coming close to flagship-level endurance. Powered by the Snapdragon 8s Gen 3, the phone handles multitasking and casual gaming smoothly, with no heating issues. While the camera hardware remains unchanged, image quality stays dependable. The new Plus Key replaces the Alert Slider, bringing handy AI features that actually add value. For users of older Nord models, this is a solid upgrade. But if you're already on the Nord 4 or 3, waiting might make more sense. And if premium design matters, the Realme GT 6 series may appeal more. The Nord 5 gets the basics right, and for many, thats more than enough.
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What exactly makes the Nothing Phone (3a) Pro "Pro"? Not muchsame display, chipset, battery, charging, and software as the Nothing Phone (3a). The only real upgrades? A periscope camera and a slightly better selfie shooter. Nothings just following the industry playbookadd a lens, slap on a "Pro" tag. The lineup is starting to feel messy, with the (3a) Pro making the (2a) Plus seem well, unnecessary. Design-wise, its stunning, but the added weight might not be for everyone. Performance is great for daily use, but gamers should look at the OnePlus Nord 4, Realme GT 6T, or Realme P3 Pro. The camera is a mixed bagsome shots are fantastic, others feel like the software got confused mid-processing. A future update might fix that. If youre new to Nothing, this is a solid pick. But if youve got the (2a) or (2a) Plus, this shouldn't be the ideal upgrade.
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