The progress bar at the bottom will turn red (handshake), then yellow (writing data).

Defines the physical area of the storage chip. For MediaTek eMMC, this is usually EMMC_USER (where the OS lives), though early boot loaders might target EMMC_BOOT_1 . How to Use the MT3367 Scatter File with SP Flash Tool

While there are dozens of partitions in a modern Android layout, a few defined in your MT3367 scatter file require special attention:

: Restoring a "dead" device by manually flashing the preloader and bootloader images using the specific memory addresses defined in the scatter file.

: Use this if you are upgrading to a radically different Android version or recovering from a soft brick.

After several days of searching, John finally stumbled upon a small, niche forum where a developer had shared a collection of scatter files for different MediaTek devices. There, nestled between files for other chipsets and models, was a "scatter.txt" file for an MT3367 device that closely matched his smartphone's specifications.

Navigate to the tab. Click on the Choose button next to the Scatter-loading File field. Browse your computer to locate your specific MT3367_Android_scatter.txt file and open it. Step 3: Verify the Partition Map

What are you trying to accomplish? (e.g., unbricking, backing up, or rooting) Are you encountering a specific error code ?

Defines the physical region of the storage chip. For example, REGION_PRELOADER is usually isolated from REGION_USER for device security and boot integrity. How to Obtain an MT3367 Scatter File

This is the core of the file. Each partition is a block inside the brackets, defining a specific part of the flash memory. Here is what you will typically see inside an MT3367 scatter file, along with what each means: