I bought the cheapest smartphones EVER.

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Published 2020-08-13
Buying the cheapest smartphones in 2020 from Wish!
Episode 1:    • I bought the cheapest smartphones on ...  
Episode 3:    • I bought the strangest smartphones ever.  
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All Comments (21)
  • @YourFBIagent_
    The 1$ tablet looks great but it’s a little expensive
  • @DanteYewToob
    I’m pretty sure that yourtubers are single handedly keeping Wish in business. They’re probably the only people aside from kids or confused old people who actually shop there.
  • I love the look of confused realization after he said, "and we have the fingerprint sensor, which surprisingly works". He went from "wow it actually works" to "wait a minute, when did I set up a fingerprint lock on a phone I just unboxed" 😂😂😂😂
  • @eggbag4182
    Still can't get over the $1 tablet. It's honestly kind of remarkable that it's a functioning Android device for one dollar, if they just made phones they could be the actual real version of the Freedom 251
  • @RatulShaw007
    Arun : “I don’t hate the finish, I don’t hate the size. But I hate everything else about it.” That’s what she said.
  • @dasjapom9984
    6:27 back in 2014 my mom bought me this tablet in the color hot pink as a surprise gift and I actually loved it was most likely priced very low since back then we couldn't afford much but I do remember that 3 years later I cracked the screen by just laying elbow on it trying to get it lol
  • @creationsmaxo
    Here's a fact about what some of those "cheap" tablets are sold for so cheap: They are scams aiming at stealing personal data. If you want to know if a tablet is a scam for stealing your data, it's super simple: Can you boot in safe mode? Can you reset the device to factory setting including formatting the data on the internal memory? Some of those tablet are made especially so that you can't fully delete most of the data without proper tools and said tools are a pain to setup. The way this is managed is as this: 1) You get a tablet for cheap. 2) The tablet is a fake in such as the memory and part inside the tablet are not what its OS is thinking it has. For example, having 8GB of flash memory instead of 16GB is a common thing. This can easily be done by a small bit of hardware flash and changing the part's ID numbers 3) The tablet is made to crash and brick within the next few months or so. The incorrect memory size fills up up to capacity and, after, the OS get some file overwritten which bricks the tablet (black screen). Remember that there is no Reset to factory option in the tablet as it was never installed with the OS. 4) You got the choice of destroying the tablet as it has no use anymore, open it and get the real part's ID and then hardware flash the OS with real part yourself (which is a super pain to do) or... contact the seller and request a refund or an exchange which, in most cases, request you return the tablet. The thing is that the tablet has your data on it and, with the right files, it's easy to fix the corrupted OS. Fixing it give them the access to the last account that was logged onto the tablet. Having such access can give the scammer access to whatever email account that was register to the device as well as, if applicable, the bank account access if the user installed a bank App. (You think that your data is safe because of a login? When you got access to the physical device, you can get pretty much all that kind of data from the flash memory itself. Remember that the OS got corrupted so all the data is still perfectly maintained except for a few MB of the OS.) I purchased one of such tablet a year ago on Amazon. I filled a dispute as the device I received was not what I paid for (with screenshot of what was in the device). The seller manually refunded me with a note to the refund that I had to return the tablet. he (or she) didn't used the way requested by Amazon so Amazon never generated a return slip for me to ship it back. An Amazon customer service agent confirmed that the seller refunded me and there was no need to return the tablet because it was only a refund process and not a return & refund. Selling a device for an insane cheap price which can return with plenty of personal information that might include access to a bank account is a common way used nowadays by scammers and identity thieves.
  • @user-tb9yv4zz3u
    11:10 Stealing his fiingerprints and putting it in the phone just incase someone steals it, is some dedication to their work. Good job Wish👍😩
  • @andypark4431
    my phone was only £100 and has worked perfectly for me for almost 2 years! would definitely recommend 'sony xperia l3' the only issue is that nobody's ever heard of it and its a pain to get cases for 😂
  • Fake sellers: Hah, he fell for our scam and gave us his money. MWTB using their fake phones for content: Oh, how the turntables.
  • @dfw4866
    I wish he'd actually give like a two or once minute review about how those phones actually work. Not just their look and feel but their performance too. Please Arun I'm very interested in your videos, but this would make it much more interesting. Coming from your biggest fan in Africa
  • @tushargupta1764
    "It is smaller than expected! That's what she said." I see you are a man of culture.
  • @shahidbashir328
    People: things are getting more expensive day by day Arun: hold my 1$ tablet
  • @ham_fast
    Great job on the cinematography in this video! The musical montage of purchases at the beginning was awesome and well done!