It’s in the very nature of technology that the components in our devices continually improve, whether it’s a sharper camera lens or a more efficient battery. We’ve come to expect across-the-board upgrades to the numbers on spec sheets when companies release new phones. Ahead of launch, many manufacturers disclose these specs to drive interest and give customers insight into what they’ll get. Now, a botched reveal hasOnePlusbacktracking and hoping it hasn’t entirely lost its customers’ trust.

OnePlus has announcedon its website that — despite previously advertising that the OnePlus 12R would feature UFS 4.0 on the 256GB variant — the phone will actually have UFS 3.1, an older generation of the same storage technology. The company is blaming the botched announcement on an “error,” acknowledging that it originally provided inaccurate specs on its product page.

Graphic showing performance improvements of the OnePlus 11 over the OnePlus 10

Due to an error, we stated that the storage … would be UFS 4.0 in some variants. I can now confirm that the storage in all variants of the OnePlus 12R … is actually UFS 3.1.

Now, OnePlus has clarified that the device will have UFS 3.1 technology regardless of storage capacity. It went on to note that it’s the same technology featured in its OnePlus 11 series, and will still “perform really well” in terms of memory reading and writing speed.

OnePlus 12R

Ina pinned commentin the support thread, OnePlus staff member Kinder L. explained that the company is still “working on defining the next steps” for people who purchased or preordered a OnePlus 12R based on the incorrect information. The company advises such users to check back in thesupport threadon February 15 when an update is expected.

Depending on what shoppers are looking for in a phone, this news may not be a deterrent for some customers. However, it’s still worth learning what to expect before opting for a device with the older technology. For example, inmarketing materials for the OnePlus 11, the company claimed you could anticipate read times of up to twice as fast when comparing UFS 4.0 to UFS 3.1.

If you aren’t reading too much into this hiccup from OnePlus, however, the OnePlus 12Rshouldn’t be entirely ruled outwhile hunting for a new phone. The device — which is being globally launched — has a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset with 8GB of LPDDR5X RAM. Despite its UFS 3.1 storage technology, you can expect a minimum of 128GB, as well as 80W fast charging support.