At first glance, you might ask: Why not use TWRP 3.7.0 or 3.8.0?
Version 3.6.0 introduced several major updates for compatible devices: Android 11 Support: twrp-3.6.0-9-on7xelte.tar
Think of it this way: the standard "recovery mode" on your phone (accessed by pressing a button combination) is like a simple emergency room that can only perform a few basic tasks, like factory resets. TWRP transforms that into a full-fledged customization workshop. It gives you a touchscreen-driven interface that allows you to perform advanced operations, such as installing custom versions of Android (custom ROMs), creating complete system backups (Nandroid backups), and gaining root access. At first glance, you might ask: Why not use TWRP 3
Tap 7 times until a toast notification says "Developer mode has been enabled." It gives you a touchscreen-driven interface that allows
The 3.6.0 branch brought critical architectural improvements to the TWRP ecosystem: