Features
National Selfie Day with the OPPO F5 Youth
OPPO invited media and fans to somewhere magical for the celebration of their National Selfie Day. I’m not sure how this celebration of taking selfies was born, but knowing what OPPO does best, it’s expected.
I brought the new OPPO F5 Youth, which is the cheaper variant of the main OPPO F5, to the picturesque Enchanted Kingdom and took — you know it — selfies.

If you’re following me on Twitter (@danielmorial), you already got a peak of what I did around the theme park. All the succeeding photos were shot using the OPPO F5 Youth in auto mode unless stated otherwise.
Let’s begin!
We arrived in the park at high noon and the production team was still setting up the stage for the program and mini-concert to be held in the evening. While they were cooking things up, I chose to walk around the park.

EK hasn’t changed much since it opened over a decade ago. Back in elementary, this was a staple destination for my school field trips; it still seems to be since I saw a lot of students in uniform. It was cloudy but the OPPO F5 Youth handled the situation pretty well. Seems like the phone is not just for taking selfies after all.

There was a lot to see inside the park. With so many details in the structures, my walk became an impromptu photo walk. Check out the samples captured by the rear 13-megapixel camera during the day:




To my surprise, the phone managed to impress with its snaps. The pictures are generally pleasing (perhaps the location helped a lot) and have above-average quality for a budget phone. The auto white balance is spot on most of the time, but the shutter speed needs to keep up for a sharper image.
It’s a selfie phone, so here are the selfies
The F5 Youth has a better front camera compared to the rear since it’s a phone made to take selfies. It has a 16-megapixel front camera with an f/2.0 aperture and software enhancement built-in (marketed as AI) to capture great selfies.
The front camera doesn’t have autofocus like on the rear, but it seems like the sweet spot for sharp selfies is at arm’s length. It already has a wide aperture for a natural bokeh or blurry background effect as seen in this sample:

But if you want the creamy bokeh which dual camera phones deliver, there’s a toggle in the camera launcher to enable it. Even without a secondary sensor, the phone was able to take a decent selfie with background blur, although it’s not as clean as we had wanted.

As mentioned, the F5 Youth features AI facial recognition for the purpose of delivering nicer and more natural selfies in beauty mode. We already featured the different levels of the new beauty mode in our hands-on of the regular F5 variant, but the F5 Youth has a slightly downgraded front sensor.
Here are a trio of selfies with our resident artist MJ in various settings:

I definitely prefer the one without beautification. Auto or letting AI decide seem to be just fine when you want to hide your blemishes, but setting it on max made us look like life-size porcelain dolls.
Night photography
When the sun set, lights lit up the park wonderfully. It was a different vibe; better if you ask me. Here’s a sample with beauty mode set to auto:

In this image, AI worked well in making my face smoother and hiding freckles aside from the nose area. Also, I had to keep my hand steady to avoid blur because of the slower shutter speed to allow more light in the sensor. As a result, any moving objects in the background were completely smudged.
Here’s another one with a strong light source hitting my cheeks and beauty mode turned off:

Low-light photography with the rear camera is also not bad since I was able to take decent stills of the thrill rides. Since the shutter speed setting when set to auto takes its time, it’s fun to play with fast-moving objects like the roller coaster and drop tower.


Details are lacking and the digital noise is prevalent in the low-light stills. Manual controls for shuttle speed, ISO, white balance, focus, and exposure value are available under “Expert Mode” in the camera app if you want to get creative.
Time to call it a day, but before that…
Before the National Selfie Day wrapped up, OPPO announced a new F5 handset with more memory and storage dubbed the OPPO F5 6GB. After the announcement, the Parokya Ni Edgar band took the stage and the crowd sang along.

Even without a zoom lens, there’s a 2x zoom toggle in the camera launcher. It’s just digital zoom with a few software tricks to sharpen the image.
That wraps up the National Selfie Day of OPPO. With three F5 variants to choose from now, which will your GadgetMatch be?
SEE ALSO: OPPO F5 hands-on: A nearly borderless selfie phone
[irp posts=”22751″ name=”OPPO F5 hands-on: A nearly borderless selfie phone”]
Features
Why the OPPO Reno15 5G series is a creator’s essential
4K Ultra-Steady, 50MP groufies, and AI edits in one device.
There are two kinds of travel essentials: the ones you pack because you have to, and the ones you pack because they make the story better.
Often, we feel forced to choose between traveling light and bringing the bulky gear necessary to document the trip properly.
On your next trip, the OPPO Reno15 5G Series eliminates that compromise. With a thoughtful mix of hardware and software, it becomes your pocket-sized production crew, ready to capture life as it unfolds.
The crew in your pocket
The first rule of travel is to keep things light, but for a creator, “light” cannot mean lower quality.
Whether you are navigating crowded night markets or chasing the golden hour on a steep, adventurous rooftop, the 4K Ultra Steady feature ensures your footage looks composed even when the environment is chaotic.
View this post on Instagram
This stabilization changes the energy of a travel vlog, turning handheld montages into polished, cinematic clips that are ready for a Reel the moment you hit save.
View this post on Instagram
Capturing everything and everyone
Travel stories are built on shared memories, but too often, the person behind the lens is left out.
Group shots often become a messy scramble to squeeze everyone into a tight frame. The 50MP Selfie Camera changes that outcome with its 0.6x ultra-wide-angle mode
It captures the entire group with sharp detail across the frame, ensuring no one is relegated to the blurry edges.
Even if you need to crop the image later for a specific social media layout, faces remain clear and the background stays defined.
The result is a “groufie” that feels complete and professional
Scroll-stopping memories
We often summarize our trips through collages: layered photos that tell a single story.
The AI Motion Photo Popout tool brings a new dimension to these memories. With a few taps in the Gallery, the subject separates from the background to create a sophisticated, layered effect.
These edits serve as the perfect foundation for Instagram Story covers, Reel thumbnails, or high-quality personal wallpapers.
It’s a subtle digital adjustment that makes a visible difference in how your audience experiences your journey.
Reliability for the modern creator.
A smartphone is no longer just a gadget; it is a creative partner. The OPPO Reno15 Series 5G features a sleek design that looks at home beside a passport or a boarding pass.
It’s light enough for long days of exploration but polished enough for high-end city trips. The reliable battery life supports early flights, full-day itineraries, and even late-night uploads.
You’ll spend less time searching for an outlet and more time capturing the moments that matter.
Which OPPO Reno15 Series 5G is your GadgetMatch?
The series offers variants designed to fit your specific creative style.
Pick the OPPO Reno15 5G if you want a balanced everyday companion, and if you want flexibility and reliability without overcomplicating the process.
There’s the OPPO Reno15 Pro; the choice for creators where photography and videography are the main event, offering enhanced tools in a compact form.
But if you’re a value-conscious traveler who wants a practical entry point that provides core camera and AI features, then the OPPO Reno15 F 5G is your GadgetMatch.
Whichever you choose, the series proves that a travel accessory can do more than complement an outfit. It preserves your stories because it doubles as a content creator’s must-have tool.
The OPPO Reno15 Series 5G is now available in OPPO stores nationwide and the OPPO Online Store.
SEE MORE: The art of being in and behind the frame | OPPO Reno15 Pro: Camera Review
@gadgetmatch A phone that does more… so you can focus more on the moments that matter. The Galaxy S26 Ultra lets Galaxy AI handle the small stuff so you can stay present for the moments that matter. Also great for the occasional KPop concert video. Pre-order until March 17 and get double storage worth up to PhP 14,000. https://www.samsung.com/ph/smartphones/galaxy-s26-ultra/buy/ #GalaxyS26Ultra #EverydaywithGalaxyAI @samsungph ♬ original sound – GadgetMatch
Here’s the dream: a phone that helps you stay on top of things, so you can focus more on what matters.
That’s basically the idea behind Galaxy AI on the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra.
Instead of adding more things to do, the phone helps take care of the small stuff for you. Things like reminding you what’s next, or surfacing the information you need right when you need it.
So you spend less time digging through apps and more time actually doing the things you planned to do.
Editing photos is easier too. With Photo Assist, you can just describe the change you want… and Galaxy AI fills in the rest.
And if you’re cleaning up a video, Audio Eraser can reduce background noise — even from clips on third-party apps like Instagram or YouTube.
The point isn’t to make your phone the center of attention. It’s to make it helpful enough that you can forget about it for a while. Until something worth capturing happens.
And when things get a little chaotic — like concerts, street performances, or just life moving fast — Super Steady Video helps keep your shots level.
That’s definitely coming with me to the next K-pop concert.
The Galaxy S26 Ultra. Smarter phone. Slightly less stressed me.
Pre-orders are open now — with double storage for early buyers, plus additional discounts and installment offers from participating banks.
Which is great… because apparently I shoot way too many videos.
For more than a decade, the smartphone industry has been defined by a familiar race. More megapixels. Faster processors. Bigger batteries. Thinner designs. Being first. Being the most. And being the fastest.
The industry rewarded brands that appeared to be chasing specs. Bigger numbers meant progress. At least on paper.
But if you ask Samsung, the days of chasing specs may no longer define the future of Galaxy smartphones.
During a regional roundtable following the launch of the latest Galaxy devices, I asked TM Roh how the company decides when it’s time for a major hardware upgrade if it isn’t simply chasing specs.
His answer revealed how Samsung now approaches the future of its flagship smartphones.
According to Roh, hardware upgrades are increasingly tied to how well they support Galaxy AI.
“To make Galaxy AI run smoothly, it must be backed by strong hardware,” Roh said during the session, speaking through a translator. He added that Samsung develops its hardware, software, and AI capabilities together — and that major upgrades tend to arrive only when the company reaches what he described as the “desired level of excellence.”
(Quotes are approximate translations.)
“To make Galaxy AI run smoothly, it must be backed by strong hardware.”
(Approximate translation from TM Roh during the roundtable)
In short, Samsung says it’s no longer chasing specs for the sake of winning spec-sheet battles. Not anymore.
When hardware stops chasing numbers
Hardware innovation still matters. But Samsung increasingly frames those improvements as tools that enable smarter software experiences.
During the roundtable, Roh pointed to Samsung’s custom application processors, which now include stronger neural processing capabilities designed to handle AI workloads more efficiently. Dedicated hardware is also being introduced to strengthen privacy and security — including technologies embedded directly into the display. (See: Privacy Display)
Even cameras, historically one of the biggest battlegrounds for smartphone innovation, are evolving in the same direction.
Roh noted that while sensors and lenses remain important, modern smartphone photography now relies heavily on AI-powered image processing working alongside the hardware. This could also explain why, as of writing, Samsung has resisted the extra telephoto lens accessories that is prevalent with other brands.
The shift is subtle but important. Instead of emphasizing bigger numbers on spec sheets, Samsung positions hardware upgrades as part of a broader system designed to support intelligent software.
Why Samsung gets dunked on online
That philosophy, however, exists in tension with how smartphones are often discussed online.
In a landscape driven by benchmark charts and viral comparisons, incremental refinement rarely generates the same excitement as dramatic hardware leaps. Over the past few years, the Galaxy S series has occasionally become an easy target for criticism — especially as rival Android manufacturers compete to deliver the biggest numbers, the fastest charging speeds, or the thinnest designs.
The temptation in tech media, particularly on platforms like YouTube, is often to dunk on Samsung rather than examine the nuance behind its approach. Spectacular upgrades and dramatic spec sheets make better thumbnails.
Yet listening to Samsung executives across multiple briefings reveals something interesting: the messaging is remarkably consistent. Whether discussing cameras, processors, or ecosystem features, the company repeatedly returns to the same principle. Hardware innovation matters most when it unlocks a better overall experience.
A company that knows its role
That consistency suggests Samsung knows exactly who it is in the smartphone industry.
As the largest Android smartphone manufacturer globally, Samsung occupies a position where competitors often measure themselves against it. Many brands differentiate by pushing aggressive specifications or experimenting with bold hardware changes.
In many ways, everyone else is punching up.
Scale changes priorities. When you’re building devices for hundreds of millions of users, the focus shifts toward reliability, ecosystem integration, and increasingly, AI-powered experiences that work consistently across products.
Why Southeast Asia matters in Samsung’s AI strategy
During the roundtable, Roh also emphasized the importance of Southeast Asia and Oceania to Samsung’s AI strategy.
According to the company’s internal research, the region ranks among the most receptive markets for AI-powered mobile features. Younger demographics and heavy social media usage are driving adoption.
In markets where smartphones are central to communication, content creation, and digital services, AI-powered tools — from translation features to image editing — have found strong traction.
That context helps explain why Samsung continues to position AI as the defining layer of its next-generation devices.
Is the smartphone spec race ending?
For years, smartphone makers built their identities around chasing specs.
Bigger numbers meant better phones. Faster chips meant progress.
Samsung, it seems, is chasing something else.
Whether that bet ultimately reshapes the smartphone experience remains to be seen. But if Roh’s comments are any indication, the next major leap in Galaxy hardware won’t happen simply because the numbers can go higher.
It will happen when Samsung believes the experience — not the spec sheet — is ready to move forward.
-
Reviews1 week agoPOCO X8 Pro Max review: A new beast from the far east
-
News1 week agoPOCO X8 Pro Series: Price, availability in the Philippines
-
Laptops2 weeks agoApple MacBook Neo Review
-
Features2 weeks agoGalaxy AI on the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
-
Apps2 weeks agoGoogle Maps is finally getting a 3D mode
-
Entertainment2 weeks agoThe internet is thirsting over the One Piece Season 2 cast
-
Reviews1 week agoPOCO X8 Pro Iron Man Edition review: Midrange phone in superhero armor
-
Gaming2 weeks agoValve is embroiled in a lawsuit with New York over loot boxes


























