Multidisabler-samsung-2.6.zip «ORIGINAL – 2024»

Custom ROMs require a clean slate. Without disabling forced encryption, the ROM will fail to boot past the Samsung or carrier logo.

When used correctly on , the multidisabler is generally safe. However, understand the permanent consequences:

: Disabling encryption usually requires a "Format Data" (not just a wipe) in recovery immediately after flashing to take effect. Multidisabler-samsung-2.6.zip

Use the device-specific button combination (usually or Volume Up + Bixby + Power ) while connecting it to a PC via a USB cable to boot into TWRP recovery. Step 2: Format Data (Mandatory for Encryption Removal) In the TWRP main menu, tap on Wipe . Select Format Data (do not just use Advanced Wipe).

Because you changed the encryption scheme from forceencrypt to encryptable , you must format the data partition so the system can rebuild it under the new rules. Go back to the TWRP main menu and tap . Tap Format Data (do not just advanced wipe). Type yes and press the blue checkmark. Step 5: Reboot System Custom ROMs require a clean slate

Below is a you could adapt or verify against the actual file’s contents (e.g., by checking its checksum against a trusted developer’s release).

To successfully disable encryption, you almost always need to perform a Format Data (not just a factory reset) in TWRP immediately after flashing the zip. Select Format Data (do not just use Advanced Wipe)

At its core, the Multidisabler ZIP is a flashable script designed to be installed via a custom recovery (such as TWRP) immediately after flashing a custom ROM or rooting your device. It performs a few critical backend operations:

You cannot flash custom recoveries or scripts like Multidisabler without an unlocked bootloader. Unlocking will trip Samsung Knox, permanently voiding your warranty and disabling features like Samsung Pay and Secure Folder.