Windows Print — Screen ((hot))
Drop a comment below—I’m ready to defend the Scroll Lock key to the death.
Let’s hit the rewind button and look at where this key came from, why its name makes no sense in 2026, and how to turn it into a screenshotting superweapon. First, let’s address the elephant in the room. Why is it called Print Screen? windows print screen
So, tomorrow morning, when you sit down with your coffee, look at your keyboard. Find that dusty PrtScn key. Press Win + Shift + S . And finally see the world in high resolution. Drop a comment below—I’m ready to defend the
Today, it is arguably more useful than ever. In a remote-work world where we constantly share our screens, the humble PrtScn is the difference between a confusing email ("The button is red? No, the other red!") and a clear, annotated picture. Why is it called Print Screen
I use this forty times a day. Sending a bug report? Win+Shift+S , drag the box, Ctrl+V into Slack. Done. Did you know Print Screen has a cousin? Win + G opens the Xbox Game Bar. While this is for recording gameplay, it also has a dedicated screenshot button. But more importantly, if you are playing a game that blocks normal screenshot tools (looking at you, Netflix/Disney+ apps), the Game Bar often forces the capture anyway. The Verdict: Respect the Key The Print Screen key is a relic of a time when we printed code on paper to debug it. It has survived the floppy disk, the CD-ROM, and the rise of the cloud.
Believe it or not, the name isn't a typo. Back in the days of MS-DOS (the 1980s), the key worked exactly as advertised. When you pressed PrtScr , the computer would dump the entire contents of the text-based screen directly to your printer. If you had a dot-matrix printer, you’d get a physical, paper copy of your command prompt.
Suddenly, the humble PrtScn key got a PhD in design.