I called one of the top Verizon Denver System Techs whom I know, he came out to my home four years ago with his vehicle with seven antennas and laptop computer screen and we drove around the local neighborhood, monitoring and notating the reception stats on my then phone, a Note 8, comparing it to his stats on his computer screen. This took a few hours, he came into the house, from where I run my business, and we ran the stats from various positions there too. His solution was to tweak the needed settings on the nearby tower, improving my reception from the -103 to -114, improving it to the -85 to -93 range. Success! Had the improved reception on the Note 8 and Note 9 the last four years. Until... the Pixel 6 Pro arrived. Reception dropped considerably to the -103 to -117 range. Called him again, tower he said was fine, he double checked, it must be the phone I'm using causing the problems. And this is in the city, open space, 200 meters from the tower. On the roads around Denver and Rural Colorado, where the Note 9's modem reception excelled, the Pixel 6 Pro's... SUFFERS! A cell phone that cannot connect adequately under 'normal' circumstances and conditions is a phone that's handicapped. Add in the severe battery drain when the phone is constantly searching for a connection, AND THIS IS WITH 5G DISABLED in a supposedly 5G phone, why the heck did Google not test these phones out in the real world to see the phone's disabilities in actual use? The better question is... If they did test, and went ahead with the production and release with a phone whose reception is marginal for many at best, is Google guilty of fraud or something more serious? This is not an isolated issue at all. There's documentation all over, yet for the time up till the December Update that crashed and crushed many phones, Google never addressed with folks like me, the reception problems and battery drains... Due to the weak modem and accompanying software design deficiencies. To this day, Google told me there will be no refund. If this problem picks up traction, Google will have to address the problem like Samsung had to with the Note 7. Or maybe .. they won't. This is not some conspiracy against Google. Personally, all I wanted and still do, is a phone that connects well, that doesn't have the main marketing aspect...5G ... Disabled... and can go about my business, getting good reception with battery performance that parallels a 5000 capacity battery. I frankly have better things to do with life than being a beta tester for Google and posting long winded experiences of this phone that... Could become one of the great ones. Hey Google... are you freakin listening?