Oppo has officially unveiled the Reno 14 and Reno 14 Pro in China today. These newcomers are equipped with MediaTek’s semi-flagship processors, OLED displays, and massive batteries of up to 6,000mAh capacity. This is everything you need to know about the latest Reno 14 series.
Oppo Reno 14 Pro
This is the pricier variant of the two, as implied by the “Pro” moniker. It comes with a brand-new MediaTek Dimensity 8450 SoC. The Oppo Reno 14 Pro is likely one of the first devices to have this processor. At this point, even MediaTek hasn’t properly unveiled the SoC details, but it should perform better than the year-old D8350 chip.
For the Reno 14 Pro, the company chose a 6200mAh battery that you can recharge either via 80W fast wired input or 50W wireless charging for refills. There’s a 6.83” flat OLED screen on the front with a 1.5K resolution and 120Hz refresh rate. The touch sampling rate is ~240Hz, while the brightness reaches up to 1200nits.
The Oppo Reno 14 Pro can score up to 1.4 million points on AnTuTu, which makes this phone a decent upper-midrange performer. The base and the Pro models both have similar storage and RAM choices, starting at 12/256 GB. The newcomer has the latest Android 15 system onboard using Oppo’s custom Color OS skin.
We have an IP69 rating here with a tidal engine cooling solution inside to keep the temperature to a minimum. The Reno 14 Pro also has three camera lenses on the back: 50 MP Main, 50 MP Ultrawide, and 50 MP Periscope Telephoto. The front camera has a similar-sized 50 MP unit for selfies. Price-wise, the Reno 14 Pro starts at CNY 3499 (~PKR 136,000).
Oppo Reno 14
This is the vanilla variant with a smaller screen size and no wireless charging. The Reno 14 brings a 6.59″ OLED screen with the same premium 1.5K resolution and LTPS 120Hz refresh rate. The brightness on this device will also reach up to 1200 nits on sunny days if you turn on Auto brightness.
This device uses a year-old Dimensity 8350 chip. It’s quite reliable and provides a near-flagship gaming experience with its Immortalis GPU. Since it is the cheaper variant, there’s no wireless charging here. It relies on an 80W wired charging solution to fill up a 6000mAh battery.
The camera stack has a slightly worse 8MP Ultrawide unit, but the rest of the sensors are pretty much the same across the board: a 50MP Main camera, a 50MP periscope telephoto, and a 50MP selfie unit. The rumors about the telephoto coming to the vanilla variant were right all along.
The D8350 chipset may not be bleeding-edge, but it still runs hot due to its overclocked state. That’s why Reno 14 has a built-in Nano ice crystal 4700mm² VC cooling chamber. There’s an IP69 rating, an Android 15 system, and the brand-new Xiaobu AI assistant with DeepSeek integration.
The Oppo Reno 14 starts at CNY 2799 (~PKR 109,000) for a 12/256GB memory trim. Now that the Reno 14 series has been launched in China, it’s only a matter of time before more countries welcome these devices into their markets. Stay tuned for a follow-up story, as the Reno 14 lineup begins preparations for a global launch soon.