irm "https://christitus.com/win" | iex </code></pre> <h2>Safe debloat selections for Windows 11</h2> <ul> <li>[x] Remove Bloatware</li> <li>[x] Disable Telemetry</li> <li>[x] Disable Cortana</li> <li>[x] Disable Xbox Services (if not gaming)</li> <li>[ ] ~~Remove Windows Defender~~ (NOT recommended)</li> <li>[ ] ~~Remove Edge~~ (NOT recommended)</li> </ul> <h2>Tweaks I recommend</h2> <ul> <li>Disable Activity History</li> <li>Disable Ads in Start Menu</li> <li>Disable Bing Search in Registry</li> <li>Set Services to 'Manual' (not Disabled)</li> </ul> <h2>Reverting</h2> <p>Run the same script → <code>Tweaks</code> tab → <code>Undo Selected Tweaks</code><br> Or restore from a System Restore point.</p> <blockquote> <p>⚠️ Always create a restore point before running any debloat tool.</p> </blockquote> <pre><code> ---
Will this speed up gaming? A: Yes – fewer background processes = more CPU/GPU for games. chris windows 11 debloat
## Option 4: Twitter/X Thread (10 tweets) irm "https://christitus
**2/10** First, the command (run PowerShell as Admin): `irm "https://christitus.com/win" | iex` This downloads and runs the WinUtil GUI — no sketchy .exe files. **10/10** Try it on a VM or secondary PC first
**10/10** Try it on a VM or secondary PC first. Once you're comfortable, run it on your daily driver. Windows 11 becomes actually usable. ✅