F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Resolve the issue of a missing Trusted Installer on Windows 11 that controls the entire drive.

Resolve the issue of a missing Trusted Installer on Windows 11 that controls the entire drive.

Resolve the issue of a missing Trusted Installer on Windows 11 that controls the entire drive.

G
Go_Guten
Member
127
01-18-2021, 03:39 PM
#1
It seems the Windows Trusted Installer has taken over parts of your games folder from a previous installation. The issue is that this affects areas you didn’t intend to modify, and you’re concerned about losing Steam files. There’s no straightforward fix without reformatting the drive, but you might explore recovery options or restore from backups. Let me know how you’d like to proceed. Thanks, Harry Voyager
G
Go_Guten
01-18-2021, 03:39 PM #1

It seems the Windows Trusted Installer has taken over parts of your games folder from a previous installation. The issue is that this affects areas you didn’t intend to modify, and you’re concerned about losing Steam files. There’s no straightforward fix without reformatting the drive, but you might explore recovery options or restore from backups. Let me know how you’d like to proceed. Thanks, Harry Voyager

G
GoMigs
Senior Member
614
02-01-2021, 06:14 AM
#2
You want to change ownership to your User account in Windows or revert to the Trusted Installer setup?
G
GoMigs
02-01-2021, 06:14 AM #2

You want to change ownership to your User account in Windows or revert to the Trusted Installer setup?

W
wtapin
Member
149
02-09-2021, 10:53 PM
#3
You can obtain complete access using tools like NTFSAccess. Choose individual folders or select the entire drive, which may take a few minutes depending on the size.
W
wtapin
02-09-2021, 10:53 PM #3

You can obtain complete access using tools like NTFSAccess. Choose individual folders or select the entire drive, which may take a few minutes depending on the size.

F
ForeverAthena
Member
215
02-11-2021, 07:19 AM
#4
I aimed to move my Windows Games to another location, but it seems the system has taken over about 200-300GB of hidden folders on my games library drive. It won’t let them show up or delete anything, and neither Steam nor the installers can help. Windows is acting like it’s upset about it. There were also folders like WindowsApps, Programs, and others that I eventually claimed and cleared (around 100-200GB). It looks like there’s even more stuff hidden. Right now it might be better to use a separate drive just for the game installs, so I can store my Steam library temporarily while I reformat the problematic drive and isolate any Windows files. It seems whenever Microsoft gets involved, everything becomes a confusing mess.
F
ForeverAthena
02-11-2021, 07:19 AM #4

I aimed to move my Windows Games to another location, but it seems the system has taken over about 200-300GB of hidden folders on my games library drive. It won’t let them show up or delete anything, and neither Steam nor the installers can help. Windows is acting like it’s upset about it. There were also folders like WindowsApps, Programs, and others that I eventually claimed and cleared (around 100-200GB). It looks like there’s even more stuff hidden. Right now it might be better to use a separate drive just for the game installs, so I can store my Steam library temporarily while I reformat the problematic drive and isolate any Windows files. It seems whenever Microsoft gets involved, everything becomes a confusing mess.

M
MrKryp
Senior Member
643
02-15-2021, 12:43 PM
#5
Check for any concealed folders by navigating to the view menu, selecting show, and inspecting the hidden items section.
M
MrKryp
02-15-2021, 12:43 PM #5

Check for any concealed folders by navigating to the view menu, selecting show, and inspecting the hidden items section.

R
R4wC00kieD0ugh
Junior Member
2
02-22-2021, 06:02 AM
#6
Already tried it. Disabling the "Hide protected operating system files" only shows $RECYCLE.BIN and System Volume Information, but both are empty. I think removing the System Volume Info would trigger some issues.
R
R4wC00kieD0ugh
02-22-2021, 06:02 AM #6

Already tried it. Disabling the "Hide protected operating system files" only shows $RECYCLE.BIN and System Volume Information, but both are empty. I think removing the System Volume Info would trigger some issues.