See, even if you did, you’d still have to unbabyproof the C:\Windows directory because they’ve babyproofed it to such a degree that a simple del C:\Windows\System32 as admin won’t suffice. You have to give yourself ownership of that folder by fiddling with the group policy settings because TrustedInstaller is the user that has god level access to the entire system.
I did this when I was wanting to hilariously break Win11 in a VM since it ran far noticeably worse than 10.
See, even if you did, you’d still have to unbabyproof the C:\Windows directory because they’ve babyproofed it to such a degree that a simple del C:\Windows\System32 as admin won’t suffice. You have to give yourself ownership of that folder by fiddling with the group policy settings because TrustedInstaller is the user that has god level access to the entire system.
I did this when I was wanting to hilariously break Win11 in a VM since it ran far noticeably worse than 10.