Frigidaire's Gallery line sits in the awkward middle: not cheap enough to forgive flaws, not premium enough to inspire confidence. The flex drawer that toggles between fridge and freezer modes is genuinely useful, and pre-2015 units earned their keep for a decade or more, but there's almost no data on current models. One brand-new unit arrived with oxidation spots on the stainless within a week, which shouldn't happen at any price point. If you need a French door fridge tomorrow and this one's on clearance, it won't ruin your life, but LG and Bosch have earned their reputations with years of owner feedback. This one's asking you to trust a thin resume.
A refrigerator with a 21-inch touchscreen and internal cameras you can check from your phone, built on a platform that fails with metronomic regularity. The ice maker quits every few months to two years, needing motherboard and unit replacements; the defrost system clogs with ice and kills cooling in the fridge section; the compressor seizes around year five, triggering a sealed-system repair that costs more than the fridge is worth. Five warranty visits before replacement, repair bills of $300 to $600 per incident once coverage expires, and parts backordered for weeks. The smart features are genuinely useful, the French door layout is spacious, but you are buying a recurring $500 repair subscription with a side of spoiled groceries. Walk away.