The Rockchip RK3328 chipset has been a staple in the budget Android TV box market for years. While many of these devices launched with Android 7.1, 8.1, or 9.0, the hardware is capable of running newer versions. Upgrading to a can breathe new life into an aging device, providing better app compatibility, security updates, and a snappier user interface.
In the world of single-board computers (SBCs) and budget-friendly TV boxes, the processor remains a beloved workhorse. Powering devices like the Orange Pi R1 Plus , NanoPi R2S , and countless generic Android TV boxes (e.g., X96, MXQ, H96), the RK3328 has proven to be a reliable quad-core Cortex-A53 solution.
The most popular custom ROM for TV boxes. It transforms the UI into Android TV (Leanback) rather than tablet Android. rk3328 firmware android 11 verified
This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later.
Flashing AP6255 firmware on an AP6212 board → no Wi-Fi/Bluetooth. The Rockchip RK3328 chipset has been a staple
Before enabling verification, the firmware must meet these requirements:
: Some newer "generic" TV boxes (like the X88 series) ship with Android 11. Community members on forums like Armbian have verified the existence of these "super" partition-based images. In the world of single-board computers (SBCs) and
Second, the RK3328 lacks a dedicated implementation in TrustZone for Android 11. In high-security devices, Keymaster handles cryptographic operations inside a secure environment. For the RK3328, developers must either emulate software-based Keymaster (slow and vulnerable) or backport Rockchip’s legacy Librkcrypto to AVB 2.0 standards. This often leads to a trade-off: enable full verification but suffer increased boot times (often 3–5 seconds longer due to hash tree validation on eMMC).