Seems like makers of flagship Android devices can't get it right these days. We recently reported on an ever-expanding class-action lawsuit targeting LG's flagships: the G4, G5, V10, V20, and Nexus 5X. Those phones, according to the suit and thousands of online complaints by users, have a legendary bootloop issue caused by shoddy construction that bricks the phones or slows them to a crawl.

Now the Nexus 6P phablet, unveiled in September 2015 for pre-order, is also being accused in a class-action lawsuit of having a "Bootloop Defect." According to the suit, the Nexus 6P devices "are defective because they are prone to enter an endless bootloop cycle which renders them unresponsive and unusable." What's more, the suit also alleges a "Battery Drain Defect," which has also been the subject of repeated online criticism by unhappy Nexus 6P consumers.

"As the numerous complaints posted on product reviews, blogs and other consumer resources reveal, countless consumers have experienced this Defect," according to the suit. The lawsuit mocks one of the advertisements about the device that claimed: "Battery life keeps you going all day and into the night."

Phone fraud?

The suit, which seeks class-action status, names hardware maker Huawei Device USA of Texas and software maker Google of California. The lawsuit says the defects materialize both before and after the warranty period. Sometimes the warranty is not honored, and when it is honored, "consumers have had to wait several days or weeks to receive an accommodation, which often ends up being a refurbished Phone that suffers from the same Defect," according to the suit.

The Northern California federal lawsuit claims breach of warranty, fraud, unjust enrichment, and violations of numerous federal and state consumer laws. It seeks unspecified damages proven at trial to compensate consumers nationwide for a device that retailed from $499 to $649.

"When the bootlooping occurs, the phone is essentially a very expensive paperweight," the suit says.

The suit claims that neither Google nor Huawei has publicly acknowledged the alleged defects, and they have "no intention of universally remedying these problems, as Defendants routinely declined to repair defective Phones."

Google did not immediately respond for comment. Huawei declined comment. No trial date has been set at this time.