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Motorola Nexus 6 32GB GSM Unlocked Smartphone w/ Brilliant 6" Screen & Dual Front-facing Stereo Speakers - Midnight Blue,International Version

4.3 out of 5 stars 3,766 ratings

Currently unavailable.
We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock.
Brand Motorola
Operating System Android
Ram Memory Installed Size 32 GB
U Speed 2.7 GHz
Memory Storage Capacity 32 GB
Screen Size 5.9 Inches
Resolution 4128 x 3096
Model Name Nexus 6
Wireless Carrier Unlocked, Google Fi, Go Mobile
Cellular Technology 4G

About this item

  • 2G: GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900, 3G: Bands 1 / 2 / 4 / 5 / 8, 4G: LTE Bands 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 7 / 12 / 13 / 17 / 25 / 26 / 29 / 41
  • 5.96" AMOLED Capacitive Multi-Touchscreen w/ Protective Corning Gorilla Glass 3
  • Android v5.0 (Lollipop), Quad-Core 2.7 GHz Krait 450 Processor, Chipset: Qualcomm Snapdragon 85, Adreno 420 Graphics
  • 13 Megapixel Camera (4128 x 3096 pixels) w/ Autofocus, optical image stabilization, dual-LED (ring) flash + Front-facing 2 Megapixel Camera
  • Internal Memory: 32GB, 3GB RAM
  • Unlocked cell phones are compatible with GSM carriers like AT&T and T-Mobile as well as with GSM SIM cards (e.g. H20, Straight Talk, and select prepaid carriers). Unlocked cell phones will not work with CDMA Carriers like Sprint, Verizon, Boost or Virgin.

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From the manufacturer

What is an unlocked phone?

An unlocked phone is a device that is not bound to any carrier or plan. It allows you to choose your phone first and your carrier second. Upon selecting a plan, simply insert the carrier's SIM card into the phone and you're ready to go. If you decide you want to change carriers down the road or want to take an international trip, it's as simple as replacing your existing SIM card with a new SIM and activating your new plan.

What are the benefits of an unlocked phone?

Freedom: Choose the carrier with the best service or price. If you find a better deal later, you have the ability to change to a different carrier.

Travel: Take your phone internationally and use the carrier of your choice. It's as easy as inserting an active SIM card.

Selection: Choose the phone with the features you want, whether or not your carrier sells it, and get more service options without a contract.

How do I set up my unlocked phone?

The first thing you’ll need is a SIM card for your desired carrier. When activated, the SIM card will let your phone connect to your carrier’s network. If you decide to a newer unlocked phone in the future, you can easily remove the SIM card from your old phone and put it in your new phone—just make sure you get the right size of SIM card (nano, micro, or standard) for your phone. If you want to use your phone while traveling internationally, you can easily buy a SIM card for a carrier that operates where you’re traveling. As long as it’s activated, you can just swap SIM cards when you arrive at your destination.

What's in the box

  • Motorola Nexus 6 Unlocked Cellphone
  • 32Gb Charger
  • Quick Guides.
  • Product Description

    It is really in excellent condition except for small scratch on one corner of phone. No scratched on front glass or back. Phone was replaced a year ago by Motorola. Now running latest software.

    Customer reviews

    4.3 out of 5 stars
    3,766 global ratings

    Review this product

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    Customers say

    Customers praise the phone's performance, noting it runs fantastically and has blazing fast updates, with a stunning AMOLED screen that produces sharp pictures. The sound quality receives positive for its crisp, clear audio and loud front-facing speakers, and customers find it well worth the price. The size receives mixed reactions, with some appreciating the large display while others find it too big. Build quality and battery life also get mixed reviews, with some finding it solid while others report bad build quality and poor battery performance.

    Great phone, BUT MAKE SURE YOU GET THE US VERSION (XT1103)!
    5 out of 5 stars
    Great phone, BUT MAKE SURE YOU GET THE US VERSION (XT1103)!
    SHORT VERSION: ---------------------------- You may not be able to know for sure if you will get the XT1103 (model 00630NARTL) or the XT1100 (model SM4034AW4N3) when you purchase this phone on Amazon. I bought one for myself (sold directly from Amazon) and then bought one for my wife about a month later (sold from DeltaMobiles via Amazon). I got the XT1103 US model on the first order (from Amazon), then got the XT1100 international/euro model on the second order (from DeltaMobiles). This is a problem because the XT1100 cannot use 3G or LTE on my carrier (Consumer Cellular, which piggybacks on the AT&T network) or on virtually any other US cellular carrier. So even though I went back into my Amazon order history and purchased the second Nexus 6 using the same product page as the first that I bought, the second was a different model that will not be able to utilize high-speed data. See the photo attached to this review which shows both boxes side-by-side. I am returning the XT1100 and I bought my wife another Nexus 6 directly from the Google Store to be sure I will get an XT1103 that is set up for US data networks (it was the same price as Amazon when I bought it just now). I use Amazon all the time for all kinds of things, but in this case I would recommend that you avoid purchasing a Nexus 6 through Amazon unless it is clear exactly which model you're going to receive. You are SUPPOSED to get an XT1103 when you buy the phone on this product page - note that in the Technical Details section on the product page it specifically has "00630NARTL" as the item model number, which is the US-compatible XT1103, so if you get an XT1100 (model SM4034AW4N3) you are getting the wrong phone. I am suspicious that DeltaMobiles is purposely sending people the wrong phone. LONG VERSION: ---------------------------- I love this phone. This is my first Android phone after three iPhones and I couldn't be happier. I love the huge, bright screen, the camera is pretty nice, the phone is fast, and LTE is awesome. But here's why I wrote this review: I purchased my Nexus 6 on May 7th, 2015. It shipped from Amazon (in other words it says "Ships from and sold by Amazon.com" under the price on the Amazon product page), and I got the XT1103, which is the US model. It only took a few minutes to set it up on my service (Consumer Cellular, which piggybacks on the AT&T network), and it hooked up to LTE immediately. You probably already know this if you are shopping for a high-end smartphone, but LTE (aka 4G LTE) is the most recent high-speed data network. It means faster ing, web browsing, etc. and is one of the major benefits of upgrading to a new phone if your current phone is not LTE-capable. My wife was jealous of my new, giant, beautiful phone, which is understandable since I intentionally showed it off to her all the time and often suggested the inferiority of her old iPhone (which was a hand-me-down from when I made my previous iPhone upgrade). So for our anniversary, I bought her a Nexus 6 as well (purchased on June 16th, 2015 - a little over a month from when I bought mine). I gave it to her today, and then started setting it up for her. Everything in the setup went normally just like it had with my phone, but when I disabled the wi-fi to test the data network, I noticed that her phone was not connecting to LTE (or 3G for that matter). I set both our phones side by side and checked the APN settings and some other phone settings to that they were set up identically, which they were. I had only taken the phone itself out of the box up to this point, and when I removed the rest of the contents I saw the European plug on the phone's charger. I compared the box of her phone to mine (see attached photo) and finally realized by looking at the labels that my wife's Nexus 6 was the XT1100 (euro/international model), and that I had gotten the XT1103 (the US version). While the XT1100 looks identical, has an identical OS, uses the same nano sim card, etc., it has a very different setup in of compatible cellular networks and will not use US 3G or LTE. Note that the XT1100 will still work for making calls and using basic cellular data (GSM), but you will not be able to access 3G or LTE. I was pretty certain that I had bought my wife's Nexus 6 from the exact same product page on Amazon from which I had purchased my own, so I went back into my order history to this. Both of the orders do point to the same product page, but the first order (XT1103 US model) was sold by Amazon, while the second order (XT1100 international model) was shipped/sold by DeltaMobiles. Currently (June 20th), the product page says it is being sold/shipped by Amazon again. I didn't even realize that it was a different seller when I made the second purchase. This situation is pretty frustrating because nobody buying this phone to use it in the US would likely choose the international model instead of the US model since the international model will not perform as well on US networks, so I don't know why they are sending the XT1100 to US customers. Because the seller (DeltaMobiles) covered the SM4034AW4N3 model number on the box with a separate tag (see the photo attached to this review) I became a little suspicious that they are intentionally sending people the wrong phone because many people may not know that the XM1100 is the wrong phone. After all, it is a genuine Nexus 6, it will place phone calls in the US, and it will be able to use cellular data, so many people may start using it and never realize (or only realize too late) that they've gotten the wrong phone that can't use the much faster 3G and 4G data networks. If it is possible for a seller to make a little more money by sending the XT1100 to customers in the US than by sending them the correct XM1103, I bet this would explain why DeltaMobiles is sending out the wrong phone. For your reference, these are the compatible networks for the two versions of the phone: XT1103 (Model 00630NARTL) : GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz CDMA band class: 0/1/10 WCDMA bands: 1/2/4/5/8 LTE bands: 2/3/4/5/7/12/13/17/25/26/29/41 CA DL bands: B2-B13, B2-B17, B2-29, B4-B5, B4-B13, B4-B17, B4-B29 XT1100 (Model SM4034AW4N3) GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz WCDMA bands: 1/2/4/5/6/8/9/19 LTE bands: 1/3/5/7/8/9/19/20/28/41 CA DL bands: B3-B5, B3-B8 And if you put the search term "List of LTE networks" into Google, you can go to a Wikipedia page that will show you all of the individual networks and what bands they use for LTE.
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    Top reviews from the United States

    • Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2015
      SHORT VERSION:
      ----------------------------
      You may not be able to know for sure if you will get the XT1103 (model 00630NARTL) or the XT1100 (model SM4034AW4N3) when you purchase this phone on Amazon. I bought one for myself (sold directly from Amazon) and then bought one for my wife about a month later (sold from DeltaMobiles via Amazon). I got the XT1103 US model on the first order (from Amazon), then got the XT1100 international/euro model on the second order (from DeltaMobiles). This is a problem because the XT1100 cannot use 3G or LTE on my carrier (Consumer Cellular, which piggybacks on the AT&T network) or on virtually any other US cellular carrier. So even though I went back into my Amazon order history and purchased the second Nexus 6 using the same product page as the first that I bought, the second was a different model that will not be able to utilize high-speed data. See the photo attached to this review which shows both boxes side-by-side. I am returning the XT1100 and I bought my wife another Nexus 6 directly from the Google Store to be sure I will get an XT1103 that is set up for US data networks (it was the same price as Amazon when I bought it just now). I use Amazon all the time for all kinds of things, but in this case I would recommend that you avoid purchasing a Nexus 6 through Amazon unless it is clear exactly which model you're going to receive. You are SUPPOSED to get an XT1103 when you buy the phone on this product page - note that in the Technical Details section on the product page it specifically has "00630NARTL" as the item model number, which is the US-compatible XT1103, so if you get an XT1100 (model SM4034AW4N3) you are getting the wrong phone. I am suspicious that DeltaMobiles is purposely sending people the wrong phone.

      LONG VERSION:
      ----------------------------
      I love this phone. This is my first Android phone after three iPhones and I couldn't be happier. I love the huge, bright screen, the camera is pretty nice, the phone is fast, and LTE is awesome.

      But here's why I wrote this review: I purchased my Nexus 6 on May 7th, 2015. It shipped from Amazon (in other words it says "Ships from and sold by Amazon.com" under the price on the Amazon product page), and I got the XT1103, which is the US model. It only took a few minutes to set it up on my service (Consumer Cellular, which piggybacks on the AT&T network), and it hooked up to LTE immediately. You probably already know this if you are shopping for a high-end smartphone, but LTE (aka 4G LTE) is the most recent high-speed data network. It means faster ing, web browsing, etc. and is one of the major benefits of upgrading to a new phone if your current phone is not LTE-capable.

      My wife was jealous of my new, giant, beautiful phone, which is understandable since I intentionally showed it off to her all the time and often suggested the inferiority of her old iPhone (which was a hand-me-down from when I made my previous iPhone upgrade). So for our anniversary, I bought her a Nexus 6 as well (purchased on June 16th, 2015 - a little over a month from when I bought mine). I gave it to her today, and then started setting it up for her. Everything in the setup went normally just like it had with my phone, but when I disabled the wi-fi to test the data network, I noticed that her phone was not connecting to LTE (or 3G for that matter). I set both our phones side by side and checked the APN settings and some other phone settings to that they were set up identically, which they were. I had only taken the phone itself out of the box up to this point, and when I removed the rest of the contents I saw the European plug on the phone's charger. I compared the box of her phone to mine (see attached photo) and finally realized by looking at the labels that my wife's Nexus 6 was the XT1100 (euro/international model), and that I had gotten the XT1103 (the US version). While the XT1100 looks identical, has an identical OS, uses the same nano sim card, etc., it has a very different setup in of compatible cellular networks and will not use US 3G or LTE. Note that the XT1100 will still work for making calls and using basic cellular data (GSM), but you will not be able to access 3G or LTE.

      I was pretty certain that I had bought my wife's Nexus 6 from the exact same product page on Amazon from which I had purchased my own, so I went back into my order history to this. Both of the orders do point to the same product page, but the first order (XT1103 US model) was sold by Amazon, while the second order (XT1100 international model) was shipped/sold by DeltaMobiles. Currently (June 20th), the product page says it is being sold/shipped by Amazon again. I didn't even realize that it was a different seller when I made the second purchase.

      This situation is pretty frustrating because nobody buying this phone to use it in the US would likely choose the international model instead of the US model since the international model will not perform as well on US networks, so I don't know why they are sending the XT1100 to US customers. Because the seller (DeltaMobiles) covered the SM4034AW4N3 model number on the box with a separate tag (see the photo attached to this review) I became a little suspicious that they are intentionally sending people the wrong phone because many people may not know that the XM1100 is the wrong phone. After all, it is a genuine Nexus 6, it will place phone calls in the US, and it will be able to use cellular data, so many people may start using it and never realize (or only realize too late) that they've gotten the wrong phone that can't use the much faster 3G and 4G data networks. If it is possible for a seller to make a little more money by sending the XT1100 to customers in the US than by sending them the correct XM1103, I bet this would explain why DeltaMobiles is sending out the wrong phone.

      For your reference, these are the compatible networks for the two versions of the phone:

      XT1103 (Model 00630NARTL) :
      GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
      CDMA band class: 0/1/10
      WCDMA bands: 1/2/4/5/8
      LTE bands: 2/3/4/5/7/12/13/17/25/26/29/41
      CA DL bands: B2-B13, B2-B17, B2-29, B4-B5, B4-B13, B4-B17, B4-B29

      XT1100 (Model SM4034AW4N3)
      GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
      WCDMA bands: 1/2/4/5/6/8/9/19
      LTE bands: 1/3/5/7/8/9/19/20/28/41
      CA DL bands: B3-B5, B3-B8

      And if you put the search term "List of LTE networks" into Google, you can go to a Wikipedia page that will show you all of the individual networks and what bands they use for LTE.
      Customer image
      5.0 out of 5 stars
      Great phone, BUT MAKE SURE YOU GET THE US VERSION (XT1103)!

      Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2015
      SHORT VERSION:
      ----------------------------
      You may not be able to know for sure if you will get the XT1103 (model 00630NARTL) or the XT1100 (model SM4034AW4N3) when you purchase this phone on Amazon. I bought one for myself (sold directly from Amazon) and then bought one for my wife about a month later (sold from DeltaMobiles via Amazon). I got the XT1103 US model on the first order (from Amazon), then got the XT1100 international/euro model on the second order (from DeltaMobiles). This is a problem because the XT1100 cannot use 3G or LTE on my carrier (Consumer Cellular, which piggybacks on the AT&T network) or on virtually any other US cellular carrier. So even though I went back into my Amazon order history and purchased the second Nexus 6 using the same product page as the first that I bought, the second was a different model that will not be able to utilize high-speed data. See the photo attached to this review which shows both boxes side-by-side. I am returning the XT1100 and I bought my wife another Nexus 6 directly from the Google Store to be sure I will get an XT1103 that is set up for US data networks (it was the same price as Amazon when I bought it just now). I use Amazon all the time for all kinds of things, but in this case I would recommend that you avoid purchasing a Nexus 6 through Amazon unless it is clear exactly which model you're going to receive. You are SUPPOSED to get an XT1103 when you buy the phone on this product page - note that in the Technical Details section on the product page it specifically has "00630NARTL" as the item model number, which is the US-compatible XT1103, so if you get an XT1100 (model SM4034AW4N3) you are getting the wrong phone. I am suspicious that DeltaMobiles is purposely sending people the wrong phone.

      LONG VERSION:
      ----------------------------
      I love this phone. This is my first Android phone after three iPhones and I couldn't be happier. I love the huge, bright screen, the camera is pretty nice, the phone is fast, and LTE is awesome.

      But here's why I wrote this review: I purchased my Nexus 6 on May 7th, 2015. It shipped from Amazon (in other words it says "Ships from and sold by Amazon.com" under the price on the Amazon product page), and I got the XT1103, which is the US model. It only took a few minutes to set it up on my service (Consumer Cellular, which piggybacks on the AT&T network), and it hooked up to LTE immediately. You probably already know this if you are shopping for a high-end smartphone, but LTE (aka 4G LTE) is the most recent high-speed data network. It means faster ing, web browsing, etc. and is one of the major benefits of upgrading to a new phone if your current phone is not LTE-capable.

      My wife was jealous of my new, giant, beautiful phone, which is understandable since I intentionally showed it off to her all the time and often suggested the inferiority of her old iPhone (which was a hand-me-down from when I made my previous iPhone upgrade). So for our anniversary, I bought her a Nexus 6 as well (purchased on June 16th, 2015 - a little over a month from when I bought mine). I gave it to her today, and then started setting it up for her. Everything in the setup went normally just like it had with my phone, but when I disabled the wi-fi to test the data network, I noticed that her phone was not connecting to LTE (or 3G for that matter). I set both our phones side by side and checked the APN settings and some other phone settings to that they were set up identically, which they were. I had only taken the phone itself out of the box up to this point, and when I removed the rest of the contents I saw the European plug on the phone's charger. I compared the box of her phone to mine (see attached photo) and finally realized by looking at the labels that my wife's Nexus 6 was the XT1100 (euro/international model), and that I had gotten the XT1103 (the US version). While the XT1100 looks identical, has an identical OS, uses the same nano sim card, etc., it has a very different setup in of compatible cellular networks and will not use US 3G or LTE. Note that the XT1100 will still work for making calls and using basic cellular data (GSM), but you will not be able to access 3G or LTE.

      I was pretty certain that I had bought my wife's Nexus 6 from the exact same product page on Amazon from which I had purchased my own, so I went back into my order history to this. Both of the orders do point to the same product page, but the first order (XT1103 US model) was sold by Amazon, while the second order (XT1100 international model) was shipped/sold by DeltaMobiles. Currently (June 20th), the product page says it is being sold/shipped by Amazon again. I didn't even realize that it was a different seller when I made the second purchase.

      This situation is pretty frustrating because nobody buying this phone to use it in the US would likely choose the international model instead of the US model since the international model will not perform as well on US networks, so I don't know why they are sending the XT1100 to US customers. Because the seller (DeltaMobiles) covered the SM4034AW4N3 model number on the box with a separate tag (see the photo attached to this review) I became a little suspicious that they are intentionally sending people the wrong phone because many people may not know that the XM1100 is the wrong phone. After all, it is a genuine Nexus 6, it will place phone calls in the US, and it will be able to use cellular data, so many people may start using it and never realize (or only realize too late) that they've gotten the wrong phone that can't use the much faster 3G and 4G data networks. If it is possible for a seller to make a little more money by sending the XT1100 to customers in the US than by sending them the correct XM1103, I bet this would explain why DeltaMobiles is sending out the wrong phone.

      For your reference, these are the compatible networks for the two versions of the phone:

      XT1103 (Model 00630NARTL) :
      GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
      CDMA band class: 0/1/10
      WCDMA bands: 1/2/4/5/8
      LTE bands: 2/3/4/5/7/12/13/17/25/26/29/41
      CA DL bands: B2-B13, B2-B17, B2-29, B4-B5, B4-B13, B4-B17, B4-B29

      XT1100 (Model SM4034AW4N3)
      GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
      WCDMA bands: 1/2/4/5/6/8/9/19
      LTE bands: 1/3/5/7/8/9/19/20/28/41
      CA DL bands: B3-B5, B3-B8

      And if you put the search term "List of LTE networks" into Google, you can go to a Wikipedia page that will show you all of the individual networks and what bands they use for LTE.
      Images in this review
      1,051 people found this helpful
      Report
    • Reviewed in the United States on October 24, 2015
      Just took delivery of the Nexus 6 so these are my impressions after a week of use. I will update my review should any of my opinions change as I spend more time with the device. There are a bunch of reviews that talk about the system crashing - but I have not experiences any of these to date (perhaps it is the fact the system has been upgraded to Marshmallow already). Time will tell on this.

      Originally I bought this to replace my Nexus 7 tablet as I had no intentions of using the Nexus 6 as my primary cell phone. However as soon as I got the Nexus 6 in my hands (literally) I realized the device was so much better than my current cell phone (Moto X 1st generation). I immediately switched my sim card over to the Nexus 6 (both devices use a nano sim card). The feel of the device is really good and as I am already a "two handed-texter" - the ability to text or type with one hand (given the size of the device) - is not important to me.

      Being able to drop down to a single device (tablet and cell phone) more than makes up for the requirement to use two hands to effectively text or respond to email. But for sure, this is not a device for the one-handed cell . I looked at all the tablets that are on the market today - and they have all grown in screen size and I wanted to stay with a 7 inch screen.

      As an aside... There were a couple of 7 inch tablets (ASUS and Samsung) I could have bought to replace my Nexus 7 - but they all have bad reviews (performance, crashes, etc) or are so under-configured (memory and/or processing power) that I doubt they will last the next couple of years. Decided I would rather have a smaller 6 inch screen than a crappy 7 inch tablet. My Nexus 7 tablet eventually "pooped" out as new larger releases of the operating system were installed on the device. Given the dramatic price reduction of the Nexus 6 and its compute power and 32gb of storage - the Nexus 6 made more sense to me ( new operating systems never get smaller)

      Good things about the device.....
      Already automatically updated to Android 6.0 (Marshmallow). A pleasant surprise
      Very good battery life (I am not a heavy video so check other reviews for this type of use pattern)
      Love the quick charge feature - never going to buy a cell phone without this again
      Quick transfer of applications etc between devices was done simply by tapping the two devices together
      Ability to use phone on Project FI (waiting for my request to be approved). Sick of getting raped by the ATT's of the world.
      Still comes with Google 1 year warranty
      Love that the speakers are in the front
      Clean install of Android - no vendor bloatware

      Not so good things about the device.....
      Really, really slippery - just had to order a case with non-slip surface
      Fits in my pant pockets but would be cautious of putting in my shirt pocket for fear of it falling out
      Wouldn't try running with this on my arm - really would look like a dork
      Took me a while to realize I needed to move my ear up to the top of the phone to hear the caller
      Wish the mic was on the front of the phone

      One last thing not so good thing..... I don't like the position of the on/off and volume buttons (middle of phone). I know they are placed where they are so you can use the buttons using the device in one hand as a phone - but when using the phone as a tablet - it is a little awkward trying to balance the phone e.g. while using the device to "read" with my Kindle application for example. Keep shutting the phone off when I tap to change pages (as noted above the phone is really slippery). Hopefully this gets solved with my new non-slip case.

      All in all pretty happy with the Nexus 6. Hopefully Marshmallow has eliminated any of the issues some of the other reviewers have experienced. As noted I will update my review should I experience any issues.

      Update 10/25/2015.. Just installed my non slip case (Cimo Slim Soft Case) and this has solved my hand slipping on the Nexus 6. Also as the Cimo case has raised soft plastic "buttons" that go over the Nexus 6 power and volume buttons, I have also eliminated turning on the phone by mistake (when hand slips down). Another good thing about the case is it does not cover the Motorola dimple on the back so your hand can still "find" the "dimple" to properly locate your hand on the device. Lots of the other cases cover this up.
      7 people found this helpful
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    Top reviews from other countries

    Translate all reviews to English
    • Amazon Customer
      5.0 out of 5 stars genial
      Reviewed in Mexico on March 17, 2016
      me encantaa, llego super rápido y en muy buenas condiciones. recomiendo mucho al vendedor y próximamente hará mas compras, gracias
      Report
    • Amazon カスタマー
      1.0 out of 5 stars エイプリル電材からの購入は注意しましょう。
      Reviewed in Japan on July 25, 2016
      訳あって使用していたスマホが壊れてしまい、一時しのぎでこちらエイプリル電材から中古を購入しました。

      本体の質は良かったものの、まさかシステムが改造されたもの(root)が届き、イヤホンもLTEも使えない標準とはかけ離れたものとなっていました。
      そのため、評価は☆1とさせていただきます。

      コンディションに記載されていたのなら、絶対に避けていたでしょうね(笑)