Oppo BDP-103 Blu-ray player
This Blu-ray player has the best picture that money can buy -- end of story
Pros
- Unrivalled image quality
- Class-leading design and build
- Unique feature-set
Cons
- Netflix and Vudu not useful for most Australians
- No eSATA or Gigabit Ethernet
- Expensive
Bottom Line
The BDP-103 is as good a Blu-ray player as we’ve ever seen. It’s extremely well-built and uses the highest quality components. It produces the best picture, supports the most formats, and has the most features of any consumer-level Blu-ray player on the market. Its international-focused video services are largely useless to Australia, though.
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Where to buy
Priced from: $ 699.00
Selling at 2 stores
- $699.00 - Encel Stereo
- $699.00 - Addicted to Audio
Oppo BDP-103: Features
The buttons on top of the BDP-103’s remote control are for the two premium Web video features that US Oppo fans have been asking for since the launch of the BDP-93 — Internet-based movie and TV streaming services Netflix and Vudu. Netflix has an incredibly large catalogue of movies and TV shows, and a great recommendations system, and Vudu has the largest library of 1080p streaming movies of any online service.
There’s one big problem with this though, and it’s that these services aren’t available in Australia. They’re not likely to be any time soon, either. Licencing restrictions and lucrative copyright deals mean that by and large, easy access and integrated apps for Netflix and Vudu on the Oppo BDP-103 are largely useless to Australian buyers. There are ways to access these services (we successfully used UnoDNS to access Netflix, at US$5 per month), but it’s not a seamless or trouble-free process. The BDP-103 also has main-menu-screen access to Pandora Internet Radio (US only), Film Fresh (US only), YouTube (the new TV-friendly ‘lean-back’ interface), and Google Picasa.
Beyond simply playing Blu-ray movies, the Oppo BDP-103 can handle any task that a dedicated media streamer like the WD TV Live can as well. The BDP-103 can play almost any audio, photo, or video file format that we can think of (with the exception of RAW photos from a digital SLR), whether it’s from a connected USB 2.0 or USB 3.0 portable hard drive or flash drive, or from a network media share (SMB or DLNA) over Ethernet or the bundled Wi-Fi adapter.
The two HDMI inputs — one MHL-compatible front input, one regular HDMI rear input — mean that the Oppo BDP-103 can function as an A/V receiver as well as a Blu-ray player, funneling your other digital video devices through a single HDMI input to your television. This is good for consistency — you don’t have to switch inputs on your television, which is especially convenient if you’ve actually lost your TV remote like we have. The BDP-103 can lend all its video processing, cleaning and up-scaling nous to whatever inputs it’s got connected, making it a legitmately useful addition to your home entertainment setup.
Oppo BDP-103: Performance and interface

Thanks to its dual-core processor, the BDP-103 is much, much faster than almost all of the other Blu-ray players we’ve tested in the past. The Sony BDP-S790 comes close, but it’s got a more complicated online portfolio to load up before it gets into the action.
From a cold start, the player consistently starts in under 20 seconds, booting to the main menu. Enable Quick Start, which uses a little more power at standby, and you’re in there in under 10 seconds. With a Blu-ray in the drive, you’ll be on your way to the movie’s title screen in 30 seconds or less.
Navigating the main menu, loading up and moving through the featured apps, or looking through a connected hard drive or DLNA server — all of these tasks are completed quickly, with near-instantaneous response from hitting the remote control to an action happening on-screen. With our launch-day firmware running on the BDP-103 we were able to crash the YouTube app a few times by overwhelming it with button-presses, but the most recent firmware update should address this.
The simple, white-on-black interface itself is excellent. The main menu is simple, catering first (in terms of icons from left to right) to Blu-rays, then to any directly-connected storage device for Music or Photos or Movies, then to network-connected DLNA or SMB shares. The Settings sub-menu can be found under the rightmost icon.
A second row of icons on the main menu caters to online services, with Netflix, Vudu, YouTube, Pandora, FilmFresh and Picasa lined up for easy access — not that most Australians will need more than YouTube.
The settings menu is absolutely comprehensive in terms of the features it’s got on offer. There’s more to fiddle here than we’ve seen on any other Blu-ray player — more than on most television sets too, to be honest. We’d recommend you read the Oppo manual for a comprehensive overview of what options you can change on the BDP-103, but suffice to say it’s able to be installed to suit everything from a simple TV-only setup, to a hugely expensive projector-and-multi-channel multi-amplifier home cinema solution that far out-prices the player itself.
Next page: Picture quality and conclusion
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LarryT
1
Its exceedingly rare to see either eSATA or Gigabit Ethernet on any AV gear let alone a Blu-ray player. The point I am making is that a BD player is not a HTPC with a capacity to read/write data to large physical storage either connected directly to a port, or accessed over a network. Current BD media is played back at a max of about 50 Mbps, so even a USB 2 has the capacity of 480 Mbps speed. It was Mediatek that dropped eSATA BTW in this latest version of their SOC, probably because it a dying interface. The player does support 2.4 Ghz wireless so technically it does have the capacity to do 150 Mbps wireless and 100 Mbps via the network against that BD playback max rate of 50 Mbps, so why bother listing either unusual capacities as a negative?
Campbell Simpson
2
Hi Larry, thanks for your question.
My point is purely that eSATA would make for another direct-attached storage connection, purely for convenience for anyone who uses eSATA between their portable drive and PC already. We've seen eSATA before on cheaper media player products like the ASUS O!Play and the Xtreamer Pro. I do take your point about it being dropped from the SoC as I agree it's not particularly popular.
Gigabit Ethernet is even less important, yes, especially given the high quality Wi-Fi adapter, but again it's available in other media players like several Popcorn Hour models. In a home entertainment product of this price, and given its otherwise comprehensive connectivity, I thought it was worth mentioning. Neither omission is critical, but they are omissions that differentiate the BDP-103 from some competitors.
poit
3
Does this player incorporate Cinevania protection?
I like to rip all of my movies to a central server and play them back from there. Is it possible to play them back through the Oppo, or will the Cinevania kick in and stop it?
Ron
4
I have read five reviews on this machine, and so far I can't find any reviewer who has put the 2D-3D conversion to any good test. 3D is getting bigger, and I don't understand why no one is testing this. I have a 2D-3D feature on my Samsung TV, and so far it only converts some blu-rays. Others I see little to no difference, and no difference with any DVD's or computer video files. This review doesn't get into any of that important information.
Markac
5
Since both the BDP-93 and BDP-95 both had eSATA, it's quite reasonable to bemoan it's absence on the new models. A USB 3.0 port would have been a reasonable replacement.
As to the Gigabit Ethernet, that would've been nice especially as the new models have less on board RAM than the old models. Concerning the 150Mbps WiFi adapter, I found it semi useless for streaming HD content on MY BDP-93 and probably isn't much better on the new models? Personally I think 150Mbps WiFi adapters might hit that speed on some rainy February 29th, but the rest of the time the 100Mbps wired LAN port is far superior.