From the Play Store, Netflix said: “Your device isn’t compatible with this version.”

ro.product.model=SM-T580 ro.product.manufacturer=Samsung ro.build.tags=release-keys Apps (including Netflix) can read these values. Some Netflix versions use ro.product.model and ro.product.manufacturer to decide compatibility. If the model is weird (e.g., “lineageos_gts210vewifi”), Netflix might refuse to start. Alex found an online guide: “Edit build.prop to make Netflix work!”

The guide said: change ro.product.model to a known Netflix-certified device (like Pixel 6 ), then reboot.

Why? Because modern Netflix (v6+) doesn’t rely only on build.prop . It uses Google’s Play Integrity API, which looks at cryptographic signatures, not just text strings. Changing build.prop alone no longer works for recent Netflix versions. After more research, Alex found the correct, safe method (no build.prop editing needed):

Reboot and check Play Store – Netflix should now show as compatible.

That property lives in . Part 3: Understanding build.prop build.prop is a text file full of lines like:

Alex tried sideloading the Netflix APK. It installed, but upon opening it, the dreaded message appeared: “This app is not compatible with your device.”