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Just grab a Pixel, even the newest one. Those have the best documented alternate OS support, bonus points if you use GrapheneOS. Granted, rooting is frowned upon there as they're more about security.
While I agree Pixel and GrapheneOS rock, it's a hilarious solution contextually. OP was gifted a phone for Christmas, and your solution is to get rid of the gift, assume they have expendable income, and suggest dropping $700 on a new phone so they can immediately void its warranty.
Except I wasn't replying to OP. I was replying to someone who said (and I quoted them) they only use older phones due to proven flashing support, so I was saying they don't have to for the Pixel reason. I wasn't suggesting OP do this if they don't want.
Where does it say that unlocking the bootloader and flashing an alternate OS voids the warranty? I've done it with every Nexus/Pixel I've had, and have traded them all in for credit...and even sent two in for warranty repair which Google honored.
A quick search (link below) said it doesn't necessarily void the warranty...unless what you did breaks the device and they deem it your fault. And with how good rhe flashing process is on Pixels, I feel you'd have to try and actively break it. Please don't spread unverified rumors (unless you have an official source, which I'd like) and potentially scare people away needlessly.
https://support.google.com/pixelphone/thread/94497368/will-unlocking-bootloader-custom-rom-void-my-pixel-warranty
Yea that warranty BS always irks me.
First, no it doesn't void warranty.
Second, so what if it did? How many phones has anyone sent back for warranty? I've had (let me count) about 13 individual phones since 2009. Many being duplicates of my daily driver, almost all bought second hand, so I paid no more than $120 for a phone, and as little as $50.
The number I've sent in for warranty:0. The number I've broken: probably 3 (I remember breaking one specifically, and I know I've borked the flash on a couple, but those were old and no longer of any value).
I bet most people have spent as much on a couple phones as I've spent on all my phones. And I always have a hot spare waiting at home, fully configured, all I have to do is swap the sim and I'm up and running. And OS upgrades never take out my production phone, my spare gets it first, I verify everything works, at my leisure, then switch.
Buying two Pixel 5's I'll still be well under the price of the newest Pixel. I'm a serious power user - I move gobs of files with my phone, it's always on, I'm remoting into stuff all the time (ssh and RDP), have a bunch of automation going on, I could use the most powerful available today, unlike most people who just use SMS, facecrack, and WhatsApp.
Having been doing roms since my OG Droid (boy the roms were pretty bad back then!), I've worked through the available phones that meet my requirements.
There are valid reasons to use something other than a Pixel - price and screen brightness have been 2 drivers for me.
It's only been in the last year or so that Pixel prices have hit a point where I'm willing to upgrade from my 2017 flagship (Essential Ph1), which I picked up 4 for about $80 each. In 2019 it was hard to beat the combination of price, ram, storage, cpu, brightness and hardware that the Ph1 offered, while also being fully unlocked, always.
Running Lineage, these have been phenomenal. Even today everyone is shocked at how fast my phones are - they're more responsive than most, even friends' flagships. This is because the OS is already slimmed down, and by rooting, I can further tweak things like OOM, cpu clocks, etc. And zero bloat.
And with those better cpu timings, the battery life is surprising, while the phone is even more responsive, and even with a nice, bright IPS screen. I can get probably 6hrs a day out of them, and I hammer on my phones.
I dislike large or heavy phones, and materials like ceramic/glass (yea, like the Ph1). Today the Pixel 4 and 5 are at a size I like, materials I like, and an actual upgrade from the Ph1 (this has been a challenge, since the Ph1 was a flagship), while at a reasonable price (~$130). Until recently Pixels just cost more while offerrng me nothing that I didn't already have.
Everyone's use-case is different, which means saying "Get a Pixel" or any phone isn't useful. I can use small screens, I'd love a phone like the old Samsung S4, it was a fantastic size/weight. Hell, I'd carry an S3 Mini if it had the hardware. I have family and friends that need larger screens because their vision ain't great, for them I start looking for phones by screen size. They also don't need root or flashing, while I do.