OPPO F11 review, price, and specs by Revu Philippines

OPPO F11 now P2,000 cheaper in the Philippines

In Phones by Alora Uy GuerreroLeave a Comment

The OPPO F11 with 6GB of RAM was launched in the Philippines in April this year for P15,990 (around $312). Today, you can get it for P2,000 ($39) less.

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According to OPPO, the smartphone is now priced at P13,990 ($273), so if you’ve been eyeing it for some time, you may want to buy it already. It will even be more affordable — only P13,410 ($262) tomorrow, July 12, at the Lazada Mid-Year Sale 2019. Use your BDO credit card when you purchase it, and you’ll get an extra 20% discount.

SEE ALSO: OPPO F11 review: Big, beautiful, and inexpensive and OPPO Reno 10x Zoom Edition review: Built for speed & photography

Of course, there’s always the cheaper OPPO F11 variant — the one with 4GB of RAM and is exclusive only to Shopee Philippines. But if you’re hoping for a price cut for the said model, you’ll be in for a disappointment; it still costs P12,990 ($254) on the online retail site. At the time of publishing this article, that is.

The F11 offers practically everything that makes the OPPO F11 Pro good with the exception of an elevating selfie camera and a screen that extends all the way to the top with no notch.

OPPO F11 specs

  • 6.53-inch LCD display, 2,340 x 1,080 resolution
  • Octa-core MediaTek Helio P70 processor
  • Mali-G72 GPU
  • HyperBoost
  • 4GB (Shopee)/6GB RAM
  • 64GB expandable memory
  • Dual rear cameras with a 48-megapixel main camera and a 5-megapixel depth sensor
  • 16-megapixel front camera
  • Rear-mounted fingerprint sensor
  • MicroUSB port
  • 3.5mm headphone jack
  • 4,000mAh battery with VOOC Flash Charge 3.0 fast-charging technology
  • ColorOS 6.0 based on Android 9.0 Pie
  • Colors: Fluorite Purple, Marble Green, Jewelry White

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Alora Uy Guerrero

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Editor-in-chief: Alora Uy Guerrero is a 24-year media veteran who has survived the newsrooms of giants like Yahoo and a high-stakes detour into OPPO's digital marketing. She eventually returned to her journalism roots to helm REVU. A strict advocate for quality over quantity, Alora lives by a family-first philosophy — mostly because her babies are the only bosses she can't negotiate with. When she isn't chasing kids or deadlines, she's probably traveling, shooting, or passionately over-analyzing her favorite bands, films, and basketball teams.