Unreal Mobile is offering their
Unreal Mobile Buy In Bulk Deal (
For the Price of One) on sale listed below.
Delivery is free (
includes triple punch SIM card: Standard, Micro and Nano size)
Thanks to community member
amorde for finding this deal
Note, please click on the '
View Details' link for in-depth option/order of package of choice
Available Option(s)
- 3-Month Unreal Mobile Plan $13
- Unlimited Everything
- 2GB High Speed/Month (Fast 5G speeds on GSMT)
- Note, normally priced at $39 for 3-months
- 3-Month Unreal Mobile Plan $20
- Unlimited Everything
- 3GB High Speed/Month (Fast 5G speeds on GSMT)
- Note, normally priced at $60 for 3-months
- 3-Month Unreal Mobile Plan $30
- Unlimited Everything
- 12GB High Speed/Month (Fast 5G speeds on GSMT)
- Note, normally priced at $90 for 3-months
Unreal Mobile Plan- Same network you know/love
- No overages
- Fast 5G speeds on GSMT
- SIM/free delivery
- Free International calls to 80+ countries
- Keep your existing number (or get a new one)
- No contracts
- No activation fees
- FaceTime over cellular and MMS
- Live customer support
Coverage (
w/ 5G speeds)
- GSMA (Largest GSM Network in the US)
- GSMT (Alternative GSM Network)
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MNVO = mobile network virtual operator. Basically a virtual carrier that runs on the backbone of an established carrier. Like Google Fi. Google isn't running their own towers, theyre using the towers of Sprint and T-mobile.
QCI9 = QCI values determine the priority of your data on the network. The higher the QCI value, the lower your priority. For example, Verizon prepaid gets QCI9, most of Verizon postpaid gets QCI8, and Verizon first responders get QCI7. When there's a lot of people in one place, the tower will provide better service and speeds to those with lower QCI numbers.
MNVO = mobile network virtual operator. Basically a virtual carrier that runs on the backbone of an established carrier. Like Google Fi. Google isn't running their own towers, theyre using the towers of Sprint and T-mobile.
QCI9 = QCI values determine the priority of your data on the network. The higher the QCI value, the lower your priority. For example, Verizon prepaid gets QCI9, most of Verizon postpaid gets QCI8, and Verizon first responders get QCI7. When there's a lot of people in one place, the tower will provide better service and speeds to those with lower QCI numbers.
What's the difference with the two network options?
The differences come down to the contracts. MVNO customers will get "deprioritized" (severely bottlenecked) when the data network is under heavy usage. I've never had this happen, but it greatly depends on where you live and how dependent you are on data.
MVNOs also don't have the roaming agreements that the big mobile carriers do, so signal coverage can be substantially worse, especially in rural areas. Again, I don't find this very noticeable, but I don't really drive through the boonies very much.
And the last difference is their customer service. If you think mobile companies' CS is bad, because it is, MVNO CS is way, way worse, and the company that owns Unreal is near the bottom of the stack. Expect to spend a lot of extra time on the phone with them if you run into any problems. They utterly failed at porting my number in from their own GSMA network to their own CDMA network and tried to blame it on Verizon. It took me two days to finally get a competent tech to fix it.
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