Windows 11 Debloat | Chris Titus

irm "https://christitus.com/win" | iex

Run it once a month, stay debloated, and take back control of your machine. Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes. Modifying your operating system carries inherent risk. Always back up your data before running system modification scripts. The author is not affiliated with Chris Titus Tech or Microsoft. windows 11 debloat chris titus

| Feature | Stock Windows 11 | Post-Chris Titus (Standard) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | ~140-160 | ~80-100 | | RAM usage (idle) | 3.5GB - 4.5GB | 2.2GB - 2.8GB | | Start Menu ads | "Suggested" apps present | Completely clean | | Context menu | New "Show more options" nonsense | Restores classic right-click (optional tweak) | | Edge | Runs background updater & processes | Removed as a background service (Edge stays installed) | | OneDrive | Persistent folder redirection nag | Removed entirely (if toggled) | | Xbox Game Bar | Recording in background | Disabled (but can be re-enabled) | irm "https://christitus

This deep-dive article will explain everything you need to know about the Chris Titus Windows Utility, how to use it, the risks involved, and exactly what happens when you run his debloat script on Windows 11. First, let's clear up a common misconception. Chris Titus (of Chris Titus Tech on YouTube) did not write a standalone .exe application. The "Chris Titus debloat tool" is actually a WinUtil (Windows Utility) . Always back up your data before running system