On the third attempt, a half-loaded Google search page appeared. The browser was limited—no address bar. But Alex found a workaround.
He was locked out of his own device. FRP on a Nexus 6 (Android 7.1.1, the last official update) was notoriously stubborn. Unlike newer phones, the Nexus 6 still had a few classic loopholes—if you knew where to look.
The dialer opened.
He plugged it in. The Google logo appeared. The phone booted slowly, then asked for his Google account password. Nexus 6 Frp Bypass
He tapped “Set up offline” when prompted, then “Skip” for Google services.
That’s when Alex remembered: FRP .
It didn’t work the first time. Or the second. On the third attempt, a half-loaded Google search
From there, he tapped , then the three-dot menu, then View in Play Store .
When the download finished, he tapped it. Android asked for permission to install from unknown sources—normally blocked, but because he accessed it via the Chrome Custom Tab, the system allowed it.
Alex went to → Accounts → Google → Remove account . He was locked out of his own device
Next.
Nothing happened—Play Store wasn’t installed yet. But this action triggered a silent crash that sometimes opened a hidden web browser.
He was faster this time. He tapped before the screen closed. Step 5 – TalkBack to the Rescue Inside Accessibility, Alex turned on TalkBack (Google’s screen reader). Then he went back to the Google sign-in screen.
Copyright(c) data365 Corp. All Right Reserved