Some Galaxy S22 series users state that their phone restarts and goes through this cycle several times a day while others say that their phone is randomly freezing and crashing. Regardless of which issue is making your Galaxy S22 model unusable, it is, well, making your Galaxy S22 model unusable. And this isn’t something that came out of nowhere. Earlier this year when Samsung released One UI 6.1 for the Galaxy S22 line, similar problems started to surface on the phones forcing Sammy to pull the update and re-release it a few weeks later.
I’m posting because the boot loop issue after the One UI 6.1 update is clearly widespread, and I want to gauge just how big this problem really is. Is anyone else dealing with a bricked Galaxy S22 or a constant boot loop since the update? I keep seeing new posts about it almost every day. My phone was working perfectly fine before the update. After installing it, it suddenly stopped working. Now, it’s stuck in a boot loop, and on the rare occasion it gets to the home screen, it crashes and starts looping again.”-Galaxy S22 series user
After One UI 6.1.1, my Galaxy S22 Ultra is stuck in a bootloop. Service says it’s a motherboard issue but there is no physical damage. As a loyal user of 4 Samsung devices, I’m losing trust. @SamsungMobile what now?”@SamsungIndia@tarunvats33@stufflistingspic.twitter.com/PJ9xQpEy8O
— Nikhil (@rocknik05) October 8, 2024
Well, that would be good news, right? Yes, but the technician refused to replace the motherboard under warranty because he detected a small crack on the screen that couldn’t even be picked up by a camera. As this hapless Galaxy S22 series owner said, “It’s outrageous that a £1300 ($1,625) phone has failed in 23 months, and Samsung’s response is a £500+ ($635+) repair quote for a phone which is laughably now only worth ~£400 ($500) brand-new.”
The motherboard theory seems to be the one most bandied about by Samsung’s authorized service centers according to those who have called one of the centers after their Galaxy S22 series phone was infected and affected by the update. This appears to be an issue impacting a large number of Galaxy S22 series users powered by the Exynos 2200 SoC in Asia and Europe. If the latter is true, all Galaxy S22 Ultra units should be okay since they all carried the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 application processor regardless which country they were sold in.