F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Pls help

Pls help

Pls help

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Deeon
Member
61
06-05-2023, 10:33 PM
#1
I'm trying to download Steam to play Battlebit remastered, but my computer is acting up. After resetting it, things got confusing and I don't remember much. A friend told me it might be a problem, but I'm not sure what to do. Please help me out!
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Deeon
06-05-2023, 10:33 PM #1

I'm trying to download Steam to play Battlebit remastered, but my computer is acting up. After resetting it, things got confusing and I don't remember much. A friend told me it might be a problem, but I'm not sure what to do. Please help me out!

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Nani100
Member
213
06-06-2023, 01:58 AM
#2
Review the Event Viewer for additional details. If my assumption is correct, the recovery image was removed. You’ll need to perform a clean installation of Windows manually. To do this: Copy important files to another system or storage device. Ensure everything is included carefully. Data loss here is permanent, particularly on SSDs. Obtain a USB flash drive (preferably USB 3.0 or faster). The device will be formatted; confirm no valuable data remains. Download Microsoft's Media Creation Tools for Windows 10 from the provided link: https://www.microsoft.com/en-ca/software.../windows10. If your setup supports Windows 11, consider upgrading for free at: https://www.microsoft.com/en-ca/software.../windows11. On either site, select the second blue button labeled "Create Windows 10/11 Installation Media," insert your USB drive, and launch the tool. Follow the instructions. After completion, restart your machine and boot from the USB to begin installation. At a certain point, you’ll be prompted for a product key. Choose "I don't have one" if using a laptop; Windows will search for your key in the UEFI. On a desktop, it should appear under your Microsoft account linked to the first one or identify your system via hardware details and serial number. If drivers are missing or hardware changed, you may need to reinstall drivers or drivers. By this stage, you’re finished—proceed with setup. After installation, verify Windows Update is active. Install any missing drivers using Device Manager (look for yellow "!" icons next to device names or "Unknown" entries). Apply the newest GPU drivers. For laptops, install laptop-specific driver software to fix issues like special keys or power management. If upgrading to Windows 11 and your system supports it, Windows 10 drivers will function without modification. Visit the Store, navigate to Library > Get Update, and apply all available updates for Windows. Once complete, restart your system and you’ll be ready to recover your data. After that, you can install your desired applications or games.
N
Nani100
06-06-2023, 01:58 AM #2

Review the Event Viewer for additional details. If my assumption is correct, the recovery image was removed. You’ll need to perform a clean installation of Windows manually. To do this: Copy important files to another system or storage device. Ensure everything is included carefully. Data loss here is permanent, particularly on SSDs. Obtain a USB flash drive (preferably USB 3.0 or faster). The device will be formatted; confirm no valuable data remains. Download Microsoft's Media Creation Tools for Windows 10 from the provided link: https://www.microsoft.com/en-ca/software.../windows10. If your setup supports Windows 11, consider upgrading for free at: https://www.microsoft.com/en-ca/software.../windows11. On either site, select the second blue button labeled "Create Windows 10/11 Installation Media," insert your USB drive, and launch the tool. Follow the instructions. After completion, restart your machine and boot from the USB to begin installation. At a certain point, you’ll be prompted for a product key. Choose "I don't have one" if using a laptop; Windows will search for your key in the UEFI. On a desktop, it should appear under your Microsoft account linked to the first one or identify your system via hardware details and serial number. If drivers are missing or hardware changed, you may need to reinstall drivers or drivers. By this stage, you’re finished—proceed with setup. After installation, verify Windows Update is active. Install any missing drivers using Device Manager (look for yellow "!" icons next to device names or "Unknown" entries). Apply the newest GPU drivers. For laptops, install laptop-specific driver software to fix issues like special keys or power management. If upgrading to Windows 11 and your system supports it, Windows 10 drivers will function without modification. Visit the Store, navigate to Library > Get Update, and apply all available updates for Windows. Once complete, restart your system and you’ll be ready to recover your data. After that, you can install your desired applications or games.

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DA_Red_Gamer
Member
225
06-14-2023, 06:52 PM
#3
You can clear all data by following the appropriate steps in your system. If you need further assistance, let me know.
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DA_Red_Gamer
06-14-2023, 06:52 PM #3

You can clear all data by following the appropriate steps in your system. If you need further assistance, let me know.

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jrobbs7
Member
235
06-15-2023, 09:51 PM
#4
During the Windows installation setup, it will prompt you about which storage or partition to install Windows on. If your system uses just one drive, you can choose each listed partition and remove them. The process may vary based on your setup, but don’t stress about it. The image shown here is from online sources and appears to be a virtual machine. "Drive 0" refers to the primary storage device. Drive letters aren’t displayed because they’re part of Windows terminology, not real hardware. Ideally, you should have three partitions for Windows: one acting as the boot loader (Windows Recovery partition) and two hidden ones, which remain invisible under Windows. The biggest partition is the main drive, labeled C:\ where all your files are stored.
J
jrobbs7
06-15-2023, 09:51 PM #4

During the Windows installation setup, it will prompt you about which storage or partition to install Windows on. If your system uses just one drive, you can choose each listed partition and remove them. The process may vary based on your setup, but don’t stress about it. The image shown here is from online sources and appears to be a virtual machine. "Drive 0" refers to the primary storage device. Drive letters aren’t displayed because they’re part of Windows terminology, not real hardware. Ideally, you should have three partitions for Windows: one acting as the boot loader (Windows Recovery partition) and two hidden ones, which remain invisible under Windows. The biggest partition is the main drive, labeled C:\ where all your files are stored.