We spend our own money on SIMs, run the speed tests in real places (KL, JB, Ipoh, kampung roads), and write it up in plain English so you don't have to sit through another 20-minute YouTube unboxing. This month we're deep on entry-level postpaid — where the fine print actually matters.
Six topics we get asked about again and again. If you're stuck on any of these, start here.
Postpaid isn't automatically the "premium" option. We break down when it pays off and when a decent prepaid plan does the same job for half the price.
The official coverage map says one thing. My phone in Cheras says another. Here's how to actually verify 5G at your address before you commit to a plan.
Ported three lines last year. Two went smoothly, one turned into a week-long headache. Here's the checklist I wish I'd had.
We put every sub-RM45 postpaid plan on the same table so you can stop flipping between five carrier websites.
The maths on family plans is often worse than two separate SIMs. We show the actual break-even point.
Coverage between the highways matters. We drove Route 5 and Route 12 with three SIMs and logged what dropped.
Kaki = "buddy" in colloquial Malay. That's the tone we're going for. Not a review site pretending to be neutral while quietly getting paid per click — we call out where a plan is a rip-off, where a network is genuinely doing something useful, and where the marketing is nonsense.
The site has been running since 2022. A lot of older posts have been rewritten as prices and coverage shifted — the Malaysian mobile market moves fast and half of what was true two years ago isn't now.
We run display ads on the site (that's where the cookie banner comes from). We don't take payment from carriers for coverage. If a link earns us a small commission when you sign up somewhere, we say so at the top of the article — always, in plain English.
The alternative — a paywall for basic mobile plan info — felt silly. Malaysians already pay enough for data.