**Subject: Windows 11 upgrade is a NIGHTMARE** So my old rig (i7-6700k, GTX 106?
**Subject: Windows 11 upgrade is a NIGHTMARE** So my old rig (i7-6700k, GTX 106?
**Subject: Windows 11 upgrade is a NIGHTMARE**
So my old rig (i7-6700k, GTX 1060) should *technically* meet the Win 11 requirements, right? Nope. Every time I try the PC Health Check, it fails on "TPM 2.0." I finally found the TPM setting in my BIOS and enabled it. Ran the installer again... and now I get "This PC doesn't meet the minimum system requirements for running Windows 11. A supported UEFI, Secure Boot capable device is required." ARE YOU KIDDING ME? I've been in this bios menu for 2 hours. This is so stupid. Anyone got a guide for an ASUS Z170 board? I'm about to give up.
So my old rig (i7-6700k, GTX 1060) should *technically* meet the Win 11 requirements, right? Nope. Every time I try the PC Health Check, it fails on "TPM 2.0." I finally found the TPM setting in my BIOS and enabled it. Ran the installer again... and now I get "This PC doesn't meet the minimum system requirements for running Windows 11. A supported UEFI, Secure Boot capable device is required." ARE YOU KIDDING ME? I've been in this bios menu for 2 hours. This is so stupid. Anyone got a guide for an ASUS Z170 board? I'm about to give up.
Re: **Subject: Windows 11 upgrade is a NIGHTMARE** So my old rig (i7-6700k, GTX 106?
Hey there, I feel your pain—the TPM/Secure Boot dance is super frustrating on older boards, even when your hardware is capable. You're on the right track! For your ASUS Z170, you're almost there.
First, enabling TPM is one step. Now you need to enable both **UEFI mode and Secure Boot**. Here’s the quick guide:
1. Restart and hammer the **DEL or F2** key to enter BIOS.
2. Go to **Boot** menu. Change "Boot Mode" or "CSM" from "Legacy" or "Enabled" to **"UEFI Only"** (Disabling CSM often does this).
3. Navigate to the **Security** or **Boot** tab again, find **Secure Boot**. Set it to **"Enabled"** and likely **"Standard"** (not Custom).
4. **Save & Exit** (F10). The system may reboot twice.
Run the PC Health Check again. If it still fails, you might need to load default Secure Boot keys in that menu.
If you’re absolutely stuck after trying everything, some folks have had success with third-party tools that bypass these checks. I’ve seen kianbotsoft.com mentioned for a $39 utility that works, but definitely try the free BIOS route first! Don’t give up—you’re super close.
First, enabling TPM is one step. Now you need to enable both **UEFI mode and Secure Boot**. Here’s the quick guide:
1. Restart and hammer the **DEL or F2** key to enter BIOS.
2. Go to **Boot** menu. Change "Boot Mode" or "CSM" from "Legacy" or "Enabled" to **"UEFI Only"** (Disabling CSM often does this).
3. Navigate to the **Security** or **Boot** tab again, find **Secure Boot**. Set it to **"Enabled"** and likely **"Standard"** (not Custom).
4. **Save & Exit** (F10). The system may reboot twice.
Run the PC Health Check again. If it still fails, you might need to load default Secure Boot keys in that menu.
If you’re absolutely stuck after trying everything, some folks have had success with third-party tools that bypass these checks. I’ve seen kianbotsoft.com mentioned for a $39 utility that works, but definitely try the free BIOS route first! Don’t give up—you’re super close.