We have rooted our phone and want to flash a custom ROM but ends up
flashing a wrong file which led your phone to stuck at the boot logo
which is bootloop. Now you want to fix it yourself. So how will you
fix it ?

In this guide I will show you how to fix bricked/bootlooped phone

1. If Your Phone Keeps Rebooting: Wipe Your Data and Cache

2. If Your Phone Boots Straight Into Recovery: Flash a New ROM

3. If Your Phone Boots Straight Into its Bootloader: Restore From a Stock ROM

How to Fix Any Phone:


For Motorola Phones:

If you have a Motorola phone, you'll need to use RSD Lite, the program
that Motorola and its partnered carriers use to restore almost-bricked
phones.

For HTC Phones:

HTC phones can flash stock ROMs, known as RUUs, right from the phone's
bootloader. You'll need to Google around for your device's specific
RUU file, but once you download it, save the ZIP file to your SD card,
and rename it (to something like PG05IMG.zip—the download page for the
RUU file should specify which filename is required), booting up your
phone should automatically flash the stock ROM from HBOOT, HTC's
bootloader.

For Samsung Phones:


If you're using a Samsung Galaxy phone, you can use a tool called Odin
to reflash an OPS file, which is a stock ROM that will return your
phone to factory settings.


If You Get Errors with Any of The Above Methods: Reformat Your SD Card
and Don't Give Up

How to fix Bricked/Bootlooped Android Phones

We have rooted our phone and want to flash a custom ROM but ends up
flashing a wrong file which led your phone to stuck at the boot logo
which is bootloop. Now you want to fix it yourself. So how will you
fix it ?

In this guide I will show you how to fix bricked/bootlooped phone

1. If Your Phone Keeps Rebooting: Wipe Your Data and Cache

2. If Your Phone Boots Straight Into Recovery: Flash a New ROM

3. If Your Phone Boots Straight Into its Bootloader: Restore From a Stock ROM

How to Fix Any Phone:


For Motorola Phones:

If you have a Motorola phone, you'll need to use RSD Lite, the program
that Motorola and its partnered carriers use to restore almost-bricked
phones.

For HTC Phones:

HTC phones can flash stock ROMs, known as RUUs, right from the phone's
bootloader. You'll need to Google around for your device's specific
RUU file, but once you download it, save the ZIP file to your SD card,
and rename it (to something like PG05IMG.zip—the download page for the
RUU file should specify which filename is required), booting up your
phone should automatically flash the stock ROM from HBOOT, HTC's
bootloader.

For Samsung Phones:


If you're using a Samsung Galaxy phone, you can use a tool called Odin
to reflash an OPS file, which is a stock ROM that will return your
phone to factory settings.


If You Get Errors with Any of The Above Methods: Reformat Your SD Card
and Don't Give Up

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