Our Moderator answered your question but I need to weigh in here a bit. Why did you buy the Breeze? What is your application? Is it a toy to play with occasionally? Do you intend (want to) to take video of things miles away?
The Breeze is a Selfie Drone!! Nothing more, nothing less. Selfie drones are designed to take pictures of YOU and others near you, and sure, things near you as well - but the common denominator here is "near you" - not 100's of yards away, not over the next building, not around a group of trees. I keep hearing story's, "my Breeze crashed into my neighbors house" and not it does not work right, "How come I can't fly my Breeze over 10' high", "I tried Orbit mode and hit a tree, now I need to buy spare parts", and on and on...
INSTRUCTIONS FOR NOT CRASHING AND KEEPING YOUR BREEZE FOR MANY YEARS:
YOU NEED to go find a large soccer field, or open space. Set the breeze down in the middle of that area, bring the instruction book, READ IT (it's short), and try different Tasks. Try each one, UNDERSTAND the take off height, how to tell if you have GPS lock, REALLY UNDERSTAND the RTH (Return to Home) height and function, how to cancel RTH, why you set the RTH height to whatever it is you have it set to, understand the Geofence, and so on. AND, watch the battery level - oh, and what happened if the battery gets down to 10-20% - what can you expect? If you DON'T know these answers, you NEED to find out - or you WILL CRASH.
It's like people buy this drone on a whim, go fly it, not understanding it's function and Task's, crash it and then wonder why. Or worse, these people tell others, "this drone is no good"! (Wrong!, the drone is great at what it was designed to do).
You want more distance, go buy a DJI product - but several downsides there too, but IF that drone let's you take off (and it may not), then you can fly around for a long ways. Of course, you will pay much more for the drone and batteries, but again, it depends on your application - what do you want to do with YOUR drone?
You know, when the Drone goes out of sight, or gets very small, your heart should start beating hard as there is a good chance you will not return from that flight and you will crash. The other issue here is when common-folk (people out in their yards, walking a dog, ...) see a drone flying over their head, they get nervous, they tend to report to police, or other authorities, what they just saw - and this leads to more and more restrictions and NFZ's - No Fly Zones - in cities, counties, states, ... it's very true, and we should all be worried about this.
Take your time, learn your drone, and then have fun with it. OK, off my soap box...