Comparision race: Oppo F11 and Oppo F11 Pro

Oppo F11 smartphone was launched in March 2019. The phone comes with a 6.50-inch touchscreen display. It comes with 4GB of RAM. The Oppo F11 runs Android 9.0 and is powered by a 4020mAh battery. The Oppo F11 supports VOOC fast charging.
As far as the cameras are concerned, the Oppo F11 on the rear packs a 48-megapixel primary camera and a second 5-megapixel camera. The rear camera setup has autofocus. It sports a 16-megapixel camera on the front for selfies.
The Oppo F11 runs ColorOS 6.0 based on Android 9.0 and packs 128GB of inbuilt storage that can be expanded via microSD card. It was launched in Fluorite Purple and Marbel Green colours.
Connectivity options on the Oppo F11 include Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, GPS, and Micro-USB with active 4G on both SIM cards. Sensors on the phone include accelerometer, ambient light sensor, proximity sensor, and compass/ magnetometer.
As of 25th August 2020, Oppo F11 price in India starts at Rs. 16,500.
Oppo F11 Pro is among the few smartphones to sport a pop-up selfie camera. The Oppo F11 Pro sports a big 6.5-inch display and claims a 90.9 percent screen-to-body ratio. The F11 Pro has very thin bezels around the smartphone. The phone is slightly bulky at 191g and is heavier than average. It packs in a 4,000mAh battery and has support for 20W fast charging.
The Oppo F11 Pro is powered by a MediaTek Helio P70 SoC and comes with 6GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. It runs ColorOS 6 running on top of Android 9 Pie. The UI is minimalistic and is easy to use, however, it comes with a fair amount of bloatware preinstalled on the device. There is face unlock which causes the pop-up camera to rise up for an unlock. The phone offers good battery life and lasted over a day with our use.
It has a dual-camera setup at the back with a 48-megapixel primary camera and a 5-megapixel depth sensor. The camera app is feature packed and the device manages to click good shots in different lighting conditions. It captures good photos in daylight and the AI is capable of detecting what the phone is pointed towards. Low-light shots didn’t have a lot of noise and the output wasn’t grainy. We found Nightscape mode to produce better photos in low-light.