Budget phones have become very good at pretending to be more exciting than they actually are. The Oppo K14x 5G doesn’t entirely escape that trap, but it does make a solid case for itself where it matters.
It looks nicer than most phones in this price range, lasts absolutely ages on a charge, and gets through everyday life without much fuss. That already makes it more useful than a lot of budget phones trying too hard to impress. The catch?
Oppo has played this one very safe. So, while the K14x gets plenty right, it doesn’t always feel like much of a leap. Let’s go deeper in our Oppo K14x 5G review.
Oppo K14x 5G review: Build and display
Oppo clearly wanted the K14x to look more expensive than it is, and to be fair, it pulls that off rather well. The rear panel has this crystal-like pattern that catches the light in a way that feels far more eye-catching than the usual “generic shiny budget phone” approach.
The camera module has also been cleaned up a bit, with the flash moved outside the lens housing, which helps the back look less cluttered and a touch more refined.
In the hand, the K14x feels reassuringly solid if a little chunky. At 212g, this isn’t a featherweight, and you will feel that if you’re someone who likes using their phone one-handed. The flat sides help with grip, though, and the side-mounted fingerprint scanner is placed exactly where your thumb expects it to be. No awkward finger yoga required.
There are still a few reminders that this is very much a budget phone, though. The bezels around the display are thick enough to be noticeable, and not in a charming retro way.
More frustratingly, Oppo has actually gone backwards on durability. The K14x comes with an IP64 rating, which is fine for splashes and the occasional light drizzle, but it’s a downgrade from the previous model’s IP65 protection.
ALSO READ: Oppo K14x 5G debuts with 120Hz display, 6,500mAh battery
The display itself is surprisingly solid. You’re getting a 6.75-inch LCD panel with a 120Hz refresh rate, and while the 720p resolution won’t have display nerds excited, it works better in daily life than you might expect. Scrolling feels smooth, touch response is quick, and for social media, YouTube, and OTT binges, it gets the job done with minimal fuss.
Brightness is solid too. Outdoors, it stays legible enough for Google Maps navigation or reading texts in harsh sunlight, which is more than can be said for some phones in this price bracket. Colours are punchy without looking cartoonish, and unless you’re the kind of person who actively mourns the absence of OLED blacks, you’ll probably get on with it just fine.
Oppo K14x 5G review: Performance and software
This is where the K14x starts to feel a little less exciting and a little more “budget”. Oppo has reused the same MediaTek Dimensity 6300 chip from the previous model, and while that’s not inherently a problem, it does mean this phone isn’t trying to reinvent the under-Rs 15,000 wheel.
Still, day-to-day performance is genuinely decent. Apps open quickly enough, multitasking is mostly smooth, and general navigation doesn’t feel frustratingly slow. That matters more than benchmark bragging rights, especially in this segment.
Gaming is respectable too. Lighter titles are absolutely fine, and even heavier games like BGMI and Asphalt Legends are playable as long as you keep your expectations sensible. Medium settings are where this phone is happiest. Push it harder for longer sessions and it does start to warm up and throtte.
Software is a slightly more complicated story. The phone comes with ColorOS 15 out of the box, but it did get the new ColorOS 16 update pretty much immediately after booting it up. It remains one of the more polished Android skins when it wants to be. It’s smooth, it looks good, and features like split-screen and floating windows are genuinely useful.
ALSO READ: Five ColorOS 16 features that make tinkering on Android fun again
The problem, as ever, is the clutter. Oppo has packed the K14x with a ton of preloaded apps, games you did not ask for, and enough promotional nudging to remind you that a clean out-of-box experience is still a luxury feature. The good news is that most of it can be deleted.
Oppo K14x 5G review: Cameras
The camera setup on the Oppo K14x is serviceable, which is often code for “please don’t expect miracles”, but that would be a bit unfair here. In good lighting, the main 50MP camera can actually produce rather nice shots.
Photos come out with decent detail, respectable dynamic range, and colours that don’t feel aggressively overcooked. Oppo’s image processing is relatively restrained, which helps. However, the phone merely has a single 50MP rear shooter; no ultrawide, no telephoto, which makes the camera system feel rather limited.
Moreover, the camera isn’t always reliable. Focus can occasionally go on a small spiritual journey of its own before returning to the subject. That’s especially annoying when you’re trying to capture something quickly.
The selfie camera is a bit of a disappointment on paper, having dropped from 8MP to 5MP compared to the previous model. In practice, it’s not a disaster, but it’s clearly not an upgrade.
Video performance is actually one of the nicer surprises. You can shoot up to 1080p at 60fps, and stabilisation is better than expected.
Oppo K14x 5G review: Battery life
If there’s one area where the Oppo K14x really earns its keep, it’s battery life. This thing lasts. Properly lasts. In real-world use, the 6,500mAh battery absolutely delivers. This is a phone that comfortably gets through a full day and then some.
On lighter days, you can stretch it into day two without having to start making little battery-saving compromises like dimming the screen or pretending you don’t really need Bluetooth.
That kind of reliability matters for most people. Charging isn’t class-leading, but it’s decent enough. The included 45W charger gets you back up at a reasonable pace. It took us about an hour and 17 minutes to top the phone back from full from an empty battery.
Unboxed Take: Who should buy the Oppo K14x 5G?
The Oppo K14x 5G is not a reinvention of the budget smartphone. It’s more of a tidy refresh with a couple of very obvious strengths and a few slightly baffling compromises.
The battery life is excellent, performance is solid for everyday use, the display is smooth, and the design is genuinely nicer than you’d expect at this price. For a lot of people, that combination will be more than enough.
But there’s also a sense that Oppo has played this one a little too safely. The chip is unchanged, the RAM ceiling is lower than before, the selfie camera has taken a step back, and the durability rating has oddly dipped too. None of that ruins the phone, but it does make the K14x feel less like a proper upgrade and more like a reshuffle.
If you want a dependable under-Rs 15,000 phone that looks good, lasts ages, and won’t throw a tantrum during normal use, the Oppo K14x 5G is a sensible buy. Just don’t mistake sensible for exciting.
And for that reason, it scores a 3.5/5. What are your thoughts about the Oppo K14x 5G? Drop a comment to let us know, and stay tuned to Unboxed by Croma for more detailed gadget reviews.
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Dhriti Datta
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