Why is this a big deal? Because for the last six months, the industry standard "Firehose" programmers for these chips have been heavily signed and locked down by OEMs like OnePlus and Samsung. UnlockTool 2025.01.10.0 introduces a new generic negotiation algorithm . Instead of brute-forcing the loader, it now negotiates the UFS (Universal Flash Storage) partition map before sending the loader, tricking the TrustZone into thinking a genuine update is happening.
UnlockTool 2025.01.10.0 introduces . The release notes simply say "Added MT6893, MT6983, MT6985 support" . The reality is more complex. The tool now uses a DMA (Direct Memory Access) overflow to write a small payload into the L2 cache before the boot ROM locks the debug interface. UnlockTool-2025.01.10.0 Released Update
This is the under-the-hood revolution. Previously, loading the FRP (Factory Reset Protection) database took 45 seconds. Now, it’s instantaneous. It also means the tool is now caching server responses locally. If your internet cuts out mid-flash, the tool now retains the authentication token for 12 hours instead of 3. This is a massive quality-of-life fix for shops in rural areas with unstable fiber connections. Yes. But with a caveat. Why is this a big deal
UnlockTool 2025.01.10.0 adds a custom PIT (Partition Information Table) rebuild function. Unlike the "Nand Erase All" approach that kills your IMEI, this update scans the user area for the backup GPT header. It recovered a device I had on the "dead pile" for three months. The tool actually rebuilt the efs metadata without destroying the Qualcomm WCN connectivity. That is insane for a tool in this price bracket. If you look at the installation directory ( C:\UnlockTool\Data\ ), you’ll notice something strange. The old .bin configuration files are gone. They’ve been replaced with SQLite databases ( secure_db.db3 ). Instead of brute-forcing the loader, it now negotiates