Frigidaire's top-freezer lineup nails the basics: cold air rises, the freezer sits at eye level, and when something breaks, the parts are cheap and the repair guy has seen it before. The Gallery line has a documented compressor-failure problem inside two years (one owner hit the wall at 21 months, facing an $1,100 sealed-system replacement), and the interior components crack and wobble like they were spec'd by the finance team. Temperature consistency has dogged Frigidaire for decades, and these models run louder than the refrigerators they replace. Buy one if you value simplicity and low upfront cost over longevity, or if you're furnishing a rental. If you need a decade of quiet, even cooling without a repair gamble, spend the extra money on a brand with a stronger track record.
GE's Cafe line delivers the aesthetics that justify a kitchen remodel: customizable finishes, flush counter-depth installation, the kind of appliance that photographs as well as it looks in person. The catch is a cooling system that fails at its one job, with multiple owners reporting fridge sections stuck at 43-49 degrees within two or three years while the freezer runs fine, a failure mode that requires sealed system repair or full replacement. If you're prioritizing design over proven reliability and can stomach both reduced storage and the real possibility of a major repair before the thing's paid off, it's a sharp visual choice. If you need a refrigerator that actually refrigerates without drama, spend your money elsewhere.