This is efficient, clean design with just a touch of style — Nokia, in a nutshell. The solid metal frame makes the phone sturdy, and the ceramic-like multi-coat paint job has just a subtle bit of texture to give you ample grip. Nokia says the thick paint let it have larger antennas because it could completely cover them with the textured finish in the end. The metal is polished up nicely with a great contrasting gold color, popping off of the white or black back. I really wonder how much Nokia targeted the Pixel 2 XL here. The texture is not unlike the Pixel 2 XL's, and that's a good thing. Similarly, the Nokia 7 Plus isn't attempting to be super-thin or sleek, it's just realistically sized and designed. It has a 6-inch 18:9 display with nicely curved glass over top and rounded corners on the display panel. The overall dimensions and weight are nearly the same as the Pixel 2 XL. The rear fingerprint sensor is easy to reach, right below the dual camera setup — which I unfortunately didn't have enough time to test thoroughly, but you hope with a 12MP f/1.75 combo and Zeiss optics it'd at least hit the mark for the price point. The phone looks great in both colors, though you'll need to have a bit of a sense of style to really acclimate to that shiny metal. But aside from that, it feels really good as well. Large, weighty, solid. Function over form in many places.