LG G7 Plus Review

Last Updated : 8/8/2025 (unstubbed for now)

‐ Introduction ‐
Physical features
Audio
Display
Bootloader unlocking & custom ROM setup
Repairability
Custom development availability
Other issues
‐ Conclusion ‐

Introduction

In 10/7/2025, 2 boys were playing the game they swore would someday quit, on their lunch breaks. They discussed about their future about the game as they went with their usual rotations. One wanted to keep going for a bit, but the other wanted out. As the discussion began heating up (to a I dunno bro, won't you stay a bit longer? I'll make it worth your while!), both of their devices froze, roaring out one last long beep before powering off, never to boot again. This left the boys with 2 dead devices, which can only be sold off as spare parts (and fate agreeing with the quitter, coercing the one who wanted to keep going to quit). As the boys had this peculiar tradition of having matching devices (to symbolize their bond), both ended up scouring the internet for suitable devices, ending with 2 LG G7 Plus (which will be described as G7P where it mattered (like the different RAM/storage config), but will be addressed as G7 for when I'm generalizing the G7s) units awaiting their new displays and custom systems, which is in the quitter's hands. And as that quitter is clearly me... this left das b0ss Bob Macedrop the financier (with a bit of my "disposable" salary cut to further cover the costs) of this project, and the one who wanted us to keep going with our FGO career despite our increasing dissatisfaction.

And thus, 2 G7Ps arrived in our shared abode's mailbox in 12/7/2025. And our first impressions were surprisingly positive ‐ aside from the display issues we knew we had to fix (cracked glass) and my unit not having any buttons (in addition to worn volume switches, thanks b0ss), everything else was surprisingly healthy for secondhand units. Even the battery, which we usually expect to replace as soon as we got our hands on any secondhand shitbars.

Physical features

The G7 felt like your average glass sandwich flagship of 2018. Relatively lightweight for its size, small, and thin, all of which are a welcome break from the bulky ass X3(N/P).

Skipped the screen protector observations for now, as I've got a matte hydrogel (which lacks the usual crease in the middle) on and it's enough for me (combined with some cheap bumpercase).

Audio Quality

The G7 has a 3.5mm jack & a "boombox" bottom‐firing speaker. The earpiece should be able to work as a second speaker, but I'm not going to try that out for now, considering the last time anyone took that concept seriously was 2020 AFAIK.

The 3.5mm jack is your standard LG flagship jack ‐ sounds better, with Quad DAC boosting the quality and volume particularly for high impedance headphone owners (who would otherwise have to deal with the arbitrary volume limiter just for acceptable volume levels). Speaking of the volume limiter (at least on A11 crDroid), I actually welcomed that thing on the G7 (whereas it is a hindrance in Xiaomi devices, particularly the X3P).

The bottom‐firing speaker seems (and sounds) like your generic mono speaker, at first. Except LG cut up 300mAh off the battery (which totally explains why the G7 runs 3000mAh... right?) and a bit of plastic around the speaker, essentially making the G7's back a resonance chamber (which does vibrate when playing audio). By placing the G7 on any hard surface or a hollow container, the sound immediately becomes bassier, louder, and more unidirectional.

Display

The 6.1' (65mm x 140mm) 19.5:9 LCD display on the G7 is pretty good, as far as displays go.

Bootloader unlocking

Unlocking the G7's bootloader can be a bit involved.

Repairability

G7's repairability is basically similar to the V30 it succeeded, except with some inspiration from Samsung on the battery & daughterboard.

Teardown references :

Custom development availability (as of 15/7/2025)

I'd like to start with the rather pathetic recovery availability.

Custom ROM on the G7 is mostly serviceable, but not without issues.

And finally we're in for the custom kernel... of which I regret to inform you that there might as well be none. Sure, we get EmanuelCN0's N0Kernel, but latest builds are locked behind Telegram (with no information about compatibility and/or KernelSU availability). Juleast has perf kernel (with KernelSU), but it only works for 2SI boot ROMs (LineageOS A14).

Other issues

Here are the horrible ones:

Some not so bad (and easily ignorable) ones :

Some decent additions that doesn't make the cut for me :

Conclusion

On one hand, I could almost call the G7P (not the regular 4/64 G7, with less usable specs and even more additional variants) "2018's best device". It has an unofficial bootloader unlocking protocol that works, decent ROM availability (as long as you don't mind running permissive SELinux in A11 and having to browse some questionable sites (OneDrive and/or Telegram) for a working recovery), and decent hardware (...aside from the battery & buttons?). Except I could hand that title to some other devices.

So, why does it look like you'd rather not hand that title over? ...huh. Neat. You're right. I could've but wouldn't. For all of its issues, the others were worse. Might as well end them by not giving it said title, but not giving it to anyone else.

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