Windows 11 really isn't that bad

Author: Unit 734 | Date: 0001.01.01

As Windows 10 slips beneath the icy waves of being out of support, waving forlornly as it sinks to the bottom of the ocean of obsolete operating systems, it's worth taking a look at how its successor, Windows 11, has matured and whether it's actually any good for gaming.

Windows 11 has a dominant position as the de-facto default operating system for PCs. Buy a new laptop yono arcade or desktop and there's a 99% chance it will come with Windows. There are a few exceptions, such as the Steam Deck's Linux-based SteamOS, or the small number of machines you can buy without an OS installed, but pick up a gaming PC from any of the major players and you're getting Windows 11.

Windows 11 (and Windows 10, to an extent) sends information about your activities back to Microsoft, which some claim spikes CPU usage. Then there are the ads—you're asked during initial setup of a new Windows 11 device whether you want adverts to be tailored to you or more generic, with the caveat that the number of ads you see won't change (hint: turn off Widgets in Taskbar Settings). Microsoft Recall, the AI-catalogued searchable snapshots that Copilot+ PCs will take of your usage so you can more easily find something you half remember googling three weeks ago (and which seems very much like a solution in search of a problem) is being criticised as a privacy-invading nightmare and destined to be the new most quickly-switched-off feature.

The new File Explorer tab function in Windows 11.

(Image credit: Microsoft)

As for performance, things look very close. PC Gamer's sister site Tom's Hardware installed Windows on a Steam Deck and wrote down some frame rate comparisons which see Windows a little bit ahead in some games, and SteamOS take the lead in others. Windows on Deck isn't a perfect experience, as our man Dave found out, but SteamOS is a release that's tailored to its specific hardware, like the custom version of FreeBSD that the PlayStation 5 runs, and is only available to download as a recovery image and not a flawless experience off-Deck. It's possible to install GPU drivers and even Valve's Proton abstraction layer on Linux (and some of them can be very good, as Tom's Hardware discovered), but you don't get the SteamOS frontend and Big Picture Mode can be finicky.

Thinking of upgrading?

Windows 11 Square logo

(Image credit: Microsoft)

Windows 11 review: What we think of the latest OS.
How to install Windows 11: Our guide to a secure install.
Windows 11 TPM requirement: Strict OS security.

However, you can do it if you want, and that's always been the guiding light of PC use. You don't have to be tied in to one manufacturer or methodology, which is part of what makes the PC the best gaming platform as well as all the other things it can do (spreadsheets? No idea). Windows 11 has been available for three whole years now (though oddly it feels longer), and thanks to the constant stream of patches and feature updates has matured into an excellent place to game. Any enterprise of this complexity is going to come with bugs, flaws, and things that make you screw up your face in bewilderment, but there's no denying it's popular.

In the October 2024 results of the Steam Hardware Survey, Windows 11 has overtaken Windows 10 to gain yono business 48.8% of users. Win 10 sits on 47.46% (and is slowly falling), for a total Windows market share of 96.54%—including the 0.28% of gamers still using Windows 7. Linux (mostly Arch as it's the tech behind SteamOS, plus Ubuntu) sits on 2% and macOS on 1.39%. There's no arguing with those figures, and the bulk of development efforts from game companies, hardware driver writers and other software providers is going to be focused on Windows 11, love it or hate it, because that's where the audience is.

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