addressing secure boot issues is essential
addressing secure boot issues is essential
many people try to activate secure boot for games like battlefield 6, but they often face challenges. online stories warn of difficulties unlocking systems after enabling this feature, which can lead to frustrating issues. I’m unsure if my configuration will work, so I’m sharing my details so others can offer advice. My setup includes a Ryzen 7 7950X with ROG Strix X670E graphics, ASUS TUF 4090 motherboard, Corsair Vengeance DDR5 RAM, Crucial T700 SSDs, and dual-boot Windows 10/11. I use UEFI BIOS and have my files on separate drives. I’ve used Rufus to install both OSes and bypassed secure boot on Windows 11, but I’m worried about potential problems like a black screen or data loss if I turn it back on.
There could be issues after June 2026 with RTX 40xx and previous graphics cards that use secure boot. Check this article for details. It seems the problem might be resolved then, or anti-cheat could bypass the requirement, though not all anti-cheats do.
The issues most often involve older computers. I haven’t seen any cases of complete failure with AM5, though I can’t rule it out. In your situation, the main worry isn’t the standard secure boot on the X670E chip, but secure boot when you’re using a custom bootloader.
Updated secure boot settings without issues, but the game still needed TPM 2.0 activated. It took a full day fixing it since Windows couldn’t recognize the BIOS change. I ended up needing to install the newest motherboard firmware. I was cautious about doing this because ASUS and AMD updates often cause complications, and this one had a warning that I couldn’t revert it. It seems to function perfectly now. Appreciate all the advice. If anyone plans similar steps, use a trusted backup program you’re familiar with and back up your OS drive just in case. Also, make sure BitLocker isn’t enabled so your data stays safe during TPM setup.