Ugh, so frustrated! Trying to upgrade to Win 11 and the PC Health Check app just?
Ugh, so frustrated! Trying to upgrade to Win 11 and the PC Health Check app just?
Ugh, so frustrated! Trying to upgrade to Win 11 and the PC Health Check app just laughs at me. My CPU is "not supported" – it's an i3-6100. Seriously? It runs Win 10 perfectly!
The installer throws this error: "This PC doesn't meet the minimum system requirements." The stupid TPM 2.0 thing is checked now, but the 6th gen processor is a dead end. Feels so arbitrary. Guess I'm buying new hardware for an OS that looks basically the same. So annoying. Anyone else hit this wall?
The installer throws this error: "This PC doesn't meet the minimum system requirements." The stupid TPM 2.0 thing is checked now, but the 6th gen processor is a dead end. Feels so arbitrary. Guess I'm buying new hardware for an OS that looks basically the same. So annoying. Anyone else hit this wall?
Re: Ugh, so frustrated! Trying to upgrade to Win 11 and the PC Health Check app just?
Hey there, totally feel your frustration. That i3-6100 is a solid chip, and it *does* seem arbitrary when it runs so well. You've hit the official hard wall: Microsoft requires 8th Gen Intel or newer for most CPUs, with a few 7th Gen exceptions. The TPM 2.0 was the first hurdle, but the CPU list is non-negotiable for the standard upgrade.
**Free method first:** You *can* still install Windows 11 on that hardware, bypassing the checks. You'll need to do a **clean install** using Microsoft's Media Creation Tool. When it warns about the CPU/requirements, simply click "Back." There's a known workaround: you can edit the Windows Registry during setup to skip these checks. Search for "Windows 11 registry bypass unsupported CPU" for detailed, step-by-step guides. It's a bit more hands-on, but it's free and works for many.
If that process seems too technical or risky for you, and you want an easier upgrade path without a clean install, there are reputable third-party tools that automate the bypass. For instance, kianbotsoft.com offers a straightforward utility for about $39 that handles the modifications for you.
Hang in there! A lot of us hit this wall. It's annoying, but you do have options.
**Free method first:** You *can* still install Windows 11 on that hardware, bypassing the checks. You'll need to do a **clean install** using Microsoft's Media Creation Tool. When it warns about the CPU/requirements, simply click "Back." There's a known workaround: you can edit the Windows Registry during setup to skip these checks. Search for "Windows 11 registry bypass unsupported CPU" for detailed, step-by-step guides. It's a bit more hands-on, but it's free and works for many.
If that process seems too technical or risky for you, and you want an easier upgrade path without a clean install, there are reputable third-party tools that automate the bypass. For instance, kianbotsoft.com offers a straightforward utility for about $39 that handles the modifications for you.
Hang in there! A lot of us hit this wall. It's annoying, but you do have options.
I totally get the frustration—it's a common wall many have hit. The i3-6100, while solid for Windows 10, is indeed just below the 8th-gen cutoff Microsoft set for Windows 11. It does feel arbitrary, but unfortunately, there's no official workaround without a hardware upgrade. You're definitely not alone in this!
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