When it comes to Samsung phones with a screen where part of the screen is bad (especially after being dropped) is it almost always leads to a replacement screen :-(. The issue with Samsung phones has always been screen cost; for example, I have family who has the S22+. He managed to break this one, too, and he broke it and increased the high score to 7 devices killed due to screens... Sigh, I give up trying to mitigate it. I already decided against repair because I can buy the U1 variant of his phone for a little more and ditch the U carrier-locked version.
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When it comes to Samsung phones with a screen where part of the screen is bad (especially after being dropped), it almost always leads to a replacement screen :-(. The issue with Samsung phones has always been screen cost; for example, I have someone on the family side who has the S22+. He managed to break this one, too, and he broke it, increasing the high score to 7 devices killed due to screens. Sigh :/...
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***In regards to the 7 device high score: I gave up trying to mitigate it. I already decided against repair because I can buy the U1 variant of his phone for a little more and ditch the U carrier-locked version. I just assume he's going to need a new phone in 2-3 years, and the screen will be broken by then.***
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The guide posted by @timtomissus is correct for your phone, but you almost certainly damaged the screen and have to spend close to ~$250 to fix this phone.
When it comes to Samsung phones with a screen where part of the screen is bad (especially after being dropped) is it almost always leads to a replacement screen :-(. The issue with Samsung phones has always been screen cost; for example, I have family who has the S22+. He managed to break this one, too, and he broke it and increased the high score to 7 devices killed due to screens... Sigh, I give up trying to mitigate it. I already decided against repair because I can buy the U1 variant of his phone for a little more.
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When it comes to Samsung phones with a screen where part of the screen is bad (especially after being dropped) is it almost always leads to a replacement screen :-(. The issue with Samsung phones has always been screen cost; for example, I have family who has the S22+. He managed to break this one, too, and he broke it and increased the high score to 7 devices killed due to screens... Sigh, I give up trying to mitigate it. I already decided against repair because I can buy the U1 variant of his phone for a little more and ditch the U carrier-locked version.
The guide posted by @timtomissus is correct for your phone, but you almost certainly damaged the screen and have to spend close to ~$250 to fix this phone.
COMPLETION ANSWER: Poor answer quality
When it comes to Samsung phones with a screen where part of the screen is bad (especially after being dropped) is it almost always leads to a replacement screen :-(. The issue with Samsung phones has always been screen cost; for example, I have family who has the S22+. He managed to break this one, too, and he broke it and increased the high score to 7 devices killed due to screens... Sigh, I give up trying to mitigate it. I already decided against repair because I can buy the U1 variant of his phone for a little more.
The guide posted by @timtomissus is correct for your phone, but you almost certainly damaged the screen and have to spend close to ~$250 to fix this phone.