"Search for Vegamovies: Type “Vegamovies” in the search bar and select the app from the search results." Here, "search bar" might not have options. The action is to type, but "type" isn't a term here.

Starting with the first paragraph. The key term here is "Vegamovies app download process". Maybe replace "Vegamovies" with something else, but the user probably wants to vary the app name. Since the user said to skip brands and names, but the example they provided keeps the app name. Wait, the original instruction says "Skip brands and names", but in the example, they replaced "Vegamovies" with alternatives. Hmm, maybe the user wants to replace the app name with other similar-sounding names or generic terms. Alternatively, maybe they want to replace the specific app name with placeholders. Wait, but the user's example includes TubiTV, which are actual alternative apps. But the user said to skip brands and names. Maybe that's conflicting. Let me check the original user instruction again.

Another part is "so why should you download the Vegamovies app?" – "download" here is a verb and could be download, but "download" is already used in the previous steps. Since the user wants to rephrase all terms, but the instruction says to swap every word with 3 variants, but that might not be feasible for all words. Wait, the task says "swap every word with 3 variants in format opt1". Wait, maybe the user meant any term that has three variants, not every word. Since the example given in the initial query focused on specific terms, perhaps only the terms that are part of a list or have three options.

For example, "Enable Unknown Sources" – the phrase here includes "Enable" (verb) and "Sources" (noun). Since "Enable" could be grant, but "Sources" in this context is a proper noun or a specific term. Wait, "Unknown Sources" is likely a specific setting in Android, so "Unknown Sources" is a proper noun. Therefore, only "Enable" can be replaced. Maybe "Go to your device's settings" – "Go to" can be open. "Settings" could be options.

The user specified to "switch every term with 3 variants in spintax". Wait, does that mean every single term in the text, like every noun or phrase, or just key terms? The example they provided in the instructions shows replacing phrases like "Vegamovies" with three alternatives. Let me check the example again. The original text has "Vegamovies" and the spintax version replaces it with three options. So probably, for each key term, I need to find three synonyms or similar terms.

Okay, let me tackle this user's query. They want me to convert all the terms in the provided text into three synonyms each using the syn2 format. The key here is to keep the original names (like Vegamovies) intact and only replace the other terms.