A few weeks ago, Ars wrote about a proposed class-action lawsuit targeting two of LG's flagship devices, the G4 and V10 . The suit (PDF) complained of a well-known bootloop issue that either bricked the devices or slowed them to a snail's pace—all to the backdrop of warranties or LG failing to fix the problem. After we published the story, many Android fans were wondering why other LG phones that suffered the same issues were not included in the original lawsuit.

Wait no longer: the Southern California federal lawsuit has been amended (PDF) to now include the Nexus 5X, and the LG G5 and LG V20. The updated lawsuit covers every high-profile LG phone from 2015 and 2016.

Random reboots

Among other things, the suit claims that the phones' processors were inadequately soldered to the motherboard, rendering them "unable to withstand the heat." Initially, the phones begin to freeze, suffer slowdowns, overheat, and reboot at random. Eventually, the suit says, they fail.

Here is a link to our initial coverage of the G4, V10 lawsuit.

LG, of South Korea, did not immediately respond for comment. Magistrate Judge Paul L. Abrams has given the gadget and appliance maker until May 8 to respond in court.