A: Usually, yes. Most FRP bypass methods either factory reset the device or force a reset after the exploit. Back up data if possible (though FRP lock usually blocks backup access).
| Feature | Description | |---------|-------------| | Device Compatibility | Samsung Galaxy A, J, S, Note, M, and F series (Exynos & Qualcomm) | | Android Versions | 6.0 (Marshmallow) to 13 (Tiramisu) & Android 14 beta | | Method | Exploit-based using download mode or ADB | | Success Rate | ~95% for supported models | | Time Required | 2–10 minutes per device | | Internet Required | Yes (for server-side verification) |
When a user sets up a Google account on an Android device, a unique token is stored in a protected partition. If someone performs a factory reset via recovery mode (not settings menu), the device reboots and asks for the last synced Google account and password.