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Vivo 1801 Custom Rom Full -

Flashing a custom ROM is not risk-free. You must prepare thoroughly to avoid bricking your device.

Avoid sketchy sites like “romprovider.com” or “customrom.net.” Stick to trusted sources:

Do not download from YouTube links in descriptions – they often contain adware or ransomware.


The vivo 1801 (commercially known as the vivo Y91 or Y93 depending on the region) has extremely limited support for full custom ROMs. Unlike devices from brands like Xiaomi or Google, vivo devices utilize a locked bootloader system with proprietary tools, making the installation of standard Custom ROMs (like LineageOS or Pixel Experience) difficult or impossible for the average user. vivo 1801 custom rom full

There is no widely available, stable "Full" Custom ROM (such as mainstream Android 10/11/12 builds) for this specific model. Most development for this device is restricted to "Port ROMs" or modified stock firmware.


He plugged the phone into the PC again in recovery mode. He dragged the Project Sakura ROM file—1.2GB of hope—onto the internal storage.

Then came the GApps. A custom ROM was useless without the Play Store. He downloaded the "Nano" package of Open GApps to keep it lightweight. Flashing a custom ROM is not risk-free

Back on the phone screen, he selected Install. He navigated to the ROM zip file. Add to Zip Queue. He added the GApps zip.

He stared at the three swipe arrows at the bottom of the screen. This was the point of no return. If the zip was corrupted, or if the chipset didn't like the kernel, the phone would boot into an infinite logo loop, never to wake again.

Elian took a breath and Swiped to Confirm Flash. Do not download from YouTube links in descriptions

Yes. Download the stock Funtouch OS firmware (.ofp or .qsb format) and flash it using QFIL in EDL mode. You will also need to re-lock the bootloader if desired.

No custom ROM for a device without official manufacturer support is perfect. On the Vivo 1801, the experience varies by build maintainer. Typically, what works includes:

Commonly broken or buggy features on early or incomplete ROMs:

A “full” ROM implies that the maintainer has integrated stable vendor blobs, possibly from a similar Snapdragon 660 device (like the Xiaomi Mi A2), to maximize hardware compatibility.