logo
I've tested lots of Android tablets – the OnePlus Pad 3 is easily my new favourite

I've tested lots of Android tablets – the OnePlus Pad 3 is easily my new favourite

Stuff.tv05-06-2025

Stuff Verdict
Simply one of the best all-rounder Android tablets out there right now. The OnePlus Pad 3 is productivity powerhouse, gaming great and multimedia darling all in one, at a sensible price.
Pros Flagship-tier performance
Bright, detailed and colourful display that's perfect for creative work
Long-lasting battery and rapid charging
Cons Keyboard and stylus bump the price up a fair bit
Only three years of new Android generations
Average cameras and no IP rating
Introduction
It hasn't been in the tablet game all that long, but OnePlus has rapidly turned itself into a major player. Its last few efforts ranked as some of the best tablets running Android, and now it's back with a threequel that could also give the iPad Air a run for its money. The OnePlus Pad 3 has a bigger screen, bigger battery, and more powerful internals than its predecessor, yet continues the firm's run of undercutting the competition.
The 13.2in successor to the OnePlus Pad 2 arrives at $699/£529-£599/€599 depending on storage capacity, making it easier on the wallet than the similarly-sized Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE+ – and significantly cheaper than an M3-powered 13in iPad Air. Factor in the selection of first-party accessories and there shouldn't be any task this tab can't tackle.
After using one for a few weeks, I'm convinced it's the best all-rounder Android tablet. Read on to find out why.
How we test tablets
Every tablet reviewed on Stuff is used as our main device throughout the testing process. We use industry-standard benchmarks and tests, as well as our own years of experience, to judge general performance, battery life, display, sound and camera image quality. Manufacturers have no visibility on reviews before they appear online, and we never accept payment to feature products.
Find out more about how we test and rate products.
Design & build: blue me away
Measuring less than 6mm, the OnePlus Pad 3 has the iPad Air beaten for thinness, though at 675g it's a smidge heavier. I found it comfortable enough to hold one-handed for a little while, but not for an entire Netflix box-set. The screen bezels are pretty svelte, but leave just enough room to grasp it without blocking the panel.
With flattened sides and an aluminium unibody build, the Pad 3 has definitely gotten with the times. Swapping the rear camera bump from a central circle to a corner-positioned pill-shape means it has lost some of the old tablet's unique identity, though. The camera itself – a 13MP sensor with electronic image stabilisation – is still pretty basic, falling behind even inexpensive smartphones for detail, exposure and colour.
The 8MP front webcam is more of the same, and best used for video calls. It sits stealthily within the screen bezel, which is way better than a punch-hole or notch. There's face unlock support, but not the kind that's secure enough to unlock your banking apps, and what looks like a fingerprint sensor on the top edge is actually a magnetic charging port for the optional OnePlus Stylo 2 stylus. That means you'll be reaching for the screen to tap in a PIN more often than you would on competing slates.
The Storm Blue colour scheme helps the Pad 3 stand out from its rivals a bit. This is the only option for US and Europe, but India will also get a silver version. It's not the best at hiding fingerprint smudges, but that's not really an issue once you slap the tablet into the official Folio case; my review unit has pretty much lived in one from the off, as it has an adjustable kickstand that's ideal for hands-free viewing.
It was the Smart keyboard (a £169/€169 optional extra) that transformed the Pad 3 into a do-it-all tablet for me. It hooks up to the Pad with pogo pins, just like the previous generation, but the key caps are larger here – and more spaced out – so typing was a breeze. I wish it was backlit for low-light working, but like that the shortcut keys get their own row above the number keys. It doesn't add a huge amount of weight, either, so I was happy to leave it connected even when I didn't need to type anything.
The expansive touchpad underneath is a nice touch, saving the need to constantly reach for the touchscreen, and the NFC reader built into the palm rest is handy for triggering fast file transfers. It's pretty much a must-buy if you're getting a Pad 3.
Screen & sound: bigger and better
OnePlus was onto a good thing with the outgoing Pad 2's gorgeous display, so it hasn't shaken things up for the sequel – just made it even bigger. The Pad 3's panel now stretches over 13.2in, putting it on par with the larger iPad Air and Samsung's Tab S10 FE+. That makes it a little more cumbersome for one-handed use, sure – but means multimedia is that much more immersive.
It keeps the work-friendly 7:5 aspect ratio, which is ideal for side-by-side multitasking, and the adaptive refresh rate still caps out at 144Hz, so motion and fast scrolling are as smooth as butter.
The 3.4K resolution is gloriously sharp, letting you really appreciate fine details when flicking through your photo albums, and viewing angles are simply great. Peak brightness tops out at 900 nits, and while average brightness is a bit lower, there's more than enough shine here to do justice to streaming video. I was able to use the tablet outdoors, too, though dark TV dramas might be a struggle on the sunniest of days.
Is the lack of OLED display tech a deal-breaker? Not in my opinion. The LCD panel delivers impactful and vibrant colours, contrast is really rather good, and black levels are nothing to moan about either. Given most rivals at this price also use LCD screens, I think it's still comfortably near the front of the class for clarity.
The eight speaker setup – four woofers and four tweeeters, which adapt to which direction you're holding the tablet – also deliver the goods. They get easily loud enough for shared viewing, have a respectable low-end for a tablet, and don't get too shrill or sharp when you properly crank the volume.
Software experience: blank canvas
Android generally feels more at home on a big screen than it used to, but OnePlus has still managed to streamline the experience that little bit further. The tablet-tweaked version of Oxygen OS puts its own spin on Google app bar, which can be dragged into view from the bottom of the screen when using one app for seamless switching. It shows both recent and pinned apps, as well as a quick file browser for system-wide drag and drop.
The real highlight is Open Canvas, which for my money is still the best take on multitasking you'll find on any tablet. As well as the usual side-by-side layout, you can add a third app into the mix; the app you're using then fills the majority of the screen, while the other two sit at the edge. A single tap swaps the active app, no menus or gestures required. There's a quick menu at the top of each window now to let you change to full screen, open a different app, or swap to a floating window. You can save preset app pairs and trios, too. For getting work done across multiple apps, no other Android device comes close.
It helps that OnePlus has otherwise kept Oxygen OS fairly streamlined, with just a handful of own-brand apps and next to zero bloat (depending on how you feel about Microsoft Swiftkey and WPS Office over Gboard and Google Docs). There's plenty of customisation, with the choice of a combined or split quick settings menu and lots of ways to adjust your app icons. I did disable the floating toolbar, though, as it replicated a lot of the app bar's functions.
Naturally there's a generous dose of AI on board. The voice recorder can use AI to transcribe and summarise your audio; the notes app has a generative writing assistant to expand, shorten or or polish any text; and the photo gallery has an AI editor that can remove reflections, erase unwanted objects, and boost perceived detail. You also get Circle to Search and Gemini is the default voice assistant.
OnePlus promises three years of new Android generations and six of security patches, which is a decent showing, albeit less than Samsung offers for its flagship tablets. Apple iPads are usually guaranteed six years of iPad OS versions, too – and they continue to have the edge when it comes to creative software, which is worth thinking about if you're after a device to edit videos or make music with. Just keep in mind you'll spend considerably more for an Apple slate with as big a screen as the OnePlus Pad 3.
Performance & battery life: ain't no stoppin' me now
OnePlus has given the Pad 3 a real powerhouse of a CPU, breaking the trend for Android tablets rarely being performance monsters. It's rocking a Snapdragon 8 Elite, along with up to 16GB of RAM, which puts it on par with the latest crop of flagship smartphones – and brings the fight to Samsung's MediaTek-powered Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra.
As you'd expect, that means this tablet can handle just about anything you'd care to throw its way. Editing images in Lightroom, cutting videos together in Adobe Rush, and drawing with Sketchbook were all pretty much flawless. Multitasking between a web browser, document editor and file manager was also a dream, with Open Canvas making it so easy to bounce between each app.
Synthetic tests show it has plenty of grunt for both apps and games. While I've seen slightly higher benchmark scores in the phone world, they've only been from Samsung devices with overclocked 'for Galaxy' silicon. The Pad 3 has a High Performance mode that promises to wring out every last drop of power, but I only saw marginal gains.
OnePlus Pad 3 benchmark scores Balanced mode High performance mode Geekbench 6 single-core 3114 3129 Geekbench 6 multi-core 8869 9177 PC Mark Work 3.0 13629 13690 3DMark Wild Life Extreme 6587 6635
A vapour chamber that uses graphene effectively dissipates heat, so the Pad 3 never not uncomfortably hot or had to dramatically throttle performance when in regular use. I got in an hour of Diablo Immortal and frame rates stayed very consistent. Demanding 3D games are no problem here. That it can rival Samsung's far pricier flagship tablets on power is seriously impressive.
OnePlus has pulled a blinder on battery life, too. The Pad 3 has a simply enormous 12,140mAh cell, which is bigger than you'll find in any iPad or Samsung tablet. My usual mix of web browsing, gaming, video streaming and creative work saw it last several days before I needed to plug in; continuous video playback then nudged over sixteen hours, which is one of the best showings of any tablet I've tested. Getting your game on will drain it a lot faster, but even hardcore players should see over five hours per charge.
I continue to be impressed with OnePlus' ability to eke out long standby times from its tablets, too. The firm says this one will last over 70 days; I've left it for three and come back to very little power loss. Charging is suitably speedy if you've got a OnePlus Supervooc power brick, with the Pad 3 able to suck down 80W. A full top-up is done in an hour and a half, while ten minutes will net almost 20%.
OnePlus Pad 3 verdict
It's hard to think of anything more I'd want from an Android tablet than this, regardless of price. The OnePlus Pad 3 is brilliantly well-rounded, with the sort of performance to handle just about any task, top-tier accessories that make it a proper productivity machine, and battery life that's basically unrivalled.
You could argue an OLED display would be the icing on the cake, but I honestly don't feel it's needed here. The Pad 3's screen is a stunner in every respect. It's as slim and easy on the eyes as an iPad Air, and a lot more wallet-friendly than any of Samsung's big screen Android slates.
For some creative types it'll be the operating system that's the limiting factor, with fewer apps than Apple. But if Android meets your needs and you want a tablet that can truly do it all, look no further.
Stuff Says…
Score: 5/5
Simply one of the best all-rounder Android tablets out there right now. The OnePlus Pad 3 is productivity powerhouse, gaming great and multimedia darling all in one, at a sensible price.
Pros
Flagship-tier performance
Bright, detailed and colourful display that's perfect for creative work
Long-lasting battery and rapid charging
Cons
Keyboard and stylus bump the price up a fair bit
Only three years of new Android generations
Average cameras and no IP rating
OnePlus Pad 3 technical specifications
Screen 13.2in, 3392×2400 LCD w/ 144Hz CPU Snapdragon 8 Elite Memory 12/16GB Cameras 13MP rear, 8MP front Storage 256/512GB on-board Operating system Android 15 Battery 12,140mAh w/ 80W wired charging Dimensions 290x210x5.97mm, 675g

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Garmin Venu X1 is an Apple Watch Ultra for your Android phone
Garmin Venu X1 is an Apple Watch Ultra for your Android phone

Stuff.tv

timea day ago

  • Stuff.tv

Garmin Venu X1 is an Apple Watch Ultra for your Android phone

If you've always liked the look of an Apple Watch Ultra smartwatch but don't own an iPhone to pair it with, the Garmin Venu X1 could just be the next best thing. Compatible with both iOS and Android, the Garmin Venu X1 has a 2in scratch-resistant display (Garmin's biggest) and is housed in an 8mm titanium case (Garmin's thinnest) that's waterproof down to about 50m. The screen's 448×486 resolution should be ideal for showing its full-colour maps, whether you're navigating your way to the top of a mountain or just to the closest Lidl. It'll also show you things like your real-time heart rate, SPO2, and Body Battery, which is Garmin's way of working out how much energy you have, so you'll know whether you're ready to embark on one of the 100+ activities that it's capable of tracking. It'll also show notifications from your phone, so you'll have no excuse for missing that text reminding you to pick up some knock-off Monster Munch, and with support for Garmin Pay onboard you can tap it at the checkout too. The watch has a built-in speaker and microphone so you can use it for calls if you've got your hands full with shopping, plus there's also support for voice control. And if it's dark by the time you get home, there's even a built-in torch to help you navigate your way safely to the front door. How long the battery will last depends on which features you have turned on, but it'll do eight days in smartwatch mode, although that drops significantly to two days if you have the display in always-on mode. Use the GPS for any length of time and it'll fall to as little as seven hours if you also have music playing. Not all of its features are available when using the Venu X1 with iOS; you can't reply to texts from your wrist or view photo messages on the watch's screen, but that's still much more than an Apple Watch will do with an Android phone. The Garmin Venu X1 is available in two colours – black or moss with matching nylon straps – and it'll set you back £680/$800.

5 reasons to buy the new Trump Mobile phone
5 reasons to buy the new Trump Mobile phone

Stuff.tv

time3 days ago

  • Stuff.tv

5 reasons to buy the new Trump Mobile phone

There's going to be a Trump phone. Of course there is. I'd have written about this sooner, but I was stunned into silence for a full day by the news. Because even accounting for *waves hands around* everything, this new device is mind-boggling. And not in a good way. Trump offspring 'three from five' said Trump Mobile will 'revolutionise cell phones'. So far that amounts to a bad Photoshop job and year-old Android specs. Then there's the name: T1 Phone 8002, which makes me wonder whether the Trump family angrily tore up 8001 previous concepts for not being gold enough. It's also unclear whether the phone will ever exist in reality. But if it does, millions of idiots will buy one. Are you one of them? Find out by checking out these five reasons you might buy a T1 Phone 8002 Trump Mobile phone. 1. It's made in the USA* Note the asterisk. If we did footnotes, the above would link to one saying 'Ahahahahahahaha. No.' I did, however, wonder if Trump might at least finish units in the US, a bit like a Subway of phones. Instead of slapping salad on bread, someone would spend their day spray-painting imported phones gold and installing Trump-flavoured Android. But no. Eric Trump admitted they'll only 'eventually' be made in the US. So while we'll see claims this phone could only be more American if it came with a bald eagle attached and belted out the Star-Spangled Banner 24/7, it's actually from China. But who cares about facts these days? So just ignore this section (apart from the title) and move on! 2. You like surprises The Trump Mobile website lists specs like screen size (6.8in) and main camera (50MP) but skips over the processor, waterproofing, and a bunch of other things. It is clearly a rebadged Android, but which one? Just think: you could have months of excitement after placing your preorder, not knowing precisely what you'll receive! (That is, if you receive anything.) 'Buy a Trump phone or I will tear your face off.' (Eagle by Pixabay.) 3. You rock it, old-school Trump fans love the past and hate the present. The Trump phone leans into that with its 3.5mm headphone jack, which… argh. OK, this one's hard to mock. It lets you use cheap headphones that don't need charging. It's good for the planet. Which I've calculated technically makes the Trump Phone 17.3% woke. Alas, once this news makes it back to the White House, those ports might all get filled with anti-woke glue. Sorry. 4. You don't care about privacy The privacy policy for the phone is more or less 'we're watching'. Not unusual these days, but I'd personally trust a Trump phone as far as I can throw Donald Trump. Which isn't far. You might not care. You might want to send all your thoughts Trump's way. In fact, you might want the phone to go further, preinstalling Trump's latest crypto wheeze or redirecting all web traffic to 'patriotic' sites like Fox News and Truth Social. If so, this blower's your jam. Assuming it exists. 5. You really hate Apple. And Samsung. And possibly yourself. This device lets you stick it to the man. As long as that man isn't Donald Trump. He's threatened to impose tariffs on Apple and Samsung, but will surely skip them on a gold-plated Trump phone. Conflict of interest? Absolutely not. This is patriotism. Although it's patriotism at arm's length, because this is a licensing deal. If it all goes horribly wrong, the Trumps will shrug, absolve themselves of responsibility, and blame Obama. Which you might be totally on board for. So: still keen to own the phone equivalent of a Cybertruck, only in gold? Put $100 down today and you'll get your phone in September. Possibly. Oh, and no refunds. Now read (unless you've preordered a Trump phone): Best mid-range phones to buy reviewed and ranked

This OnePlus 15 camera leak makes me very nervous about the flagship
This OnePlus 15 camera leak makes me very nervous about the flagship

Stuff.tv

time3 days ago

  • Stuff.tv

This OnePlus 15 camera leak makes me very nervous about the flagship

OnePlus's next flagship smartphone is expected to be the OnePlus 15 – due to arrive later this year. The rumour mill has started churning out some leaks about the handset, including one major camera titbit. And I'm officially nervous about the flagship. Since 2021, Hasselblad has been a quiet co-pilot on OnePlus's camera journey. The results haven't always been revolutionary, but you can't deny the colour science got a notable boost, and portrait shots started getting more effective. So a leak from the reputable Digital Chat Station on Weibo says that the OnePlus 15 might ditch the Hasselblad collab in favour of an in-house 'image brand' makes me twitchy. There's a reason phone makers like to slap big-name logos on their camera modules. It's not just for show – those partnerships usually nudge the camera tuning in the right direction. Without it, there's a risk we're back to OnePlus' days of good hardware, muddled by inconsistent camera results. But, the leak suggests the OnePlus 15 will still have a triple-lens setup, including a periscope lens and a big primary sensor. That sounds great on paper, but hardware alone doesn't make a brilliant camera system. Tuning, software, and experience matter – and that's where Hasselblad's influence has historically helped OnePlus punch above its weight. Of course, there's a chance that OnePlus has picked up enough know-how from years of collaboration to go solo without things crashing and burning. But that's a pretty big gamble. It's hard not to see this as a cost-cutting move dressed up as innovation. The rest of the spec sheet is shaping up just fine. A 6.78-inch 1.5K flat display might seem like a step down from the OnePlus 13's curvy QHD+ panel. But flat screens are far more practical in daily use. Add in the next-gen Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2 chip and thinner bezels, and the OnePlus 15 is still sounding like a flagship contender. I'm just hoping the camera doesn't let the side down.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store