Windows 11 Debloat Chris Titus -

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While this tool is excellent, "Debloating" always carries risks. Here is a feature-risk assessment:

| Feature | Risk Level | Analysis | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Essential Tweaks | Low | Generally safe. Disabling telemetry rarely breaks core functionality. | | Remove Bloatware | Low/Med | Safe for basic apps. Warning: Do not remove "Windows Web Experience Pack" if you rely on Widgets, as it can break the Weather taskbar icon. | | Remove Microsoft Edge | High | Windows 11 relies on Edge for WebView2 (apps like Discord, Outlook New rely on it). Removing Edge can cause other apps to crash or links to stop opening. |

The clock on the wall read 2:00 AM. The blue light from the monitor bathed the room in a cold, clinical glow. Mark rubbed his eyes, staring at the "Service Host: Superfetch" process in his task manager, which was stubbornly eating 30% of his CPU.

He had just bought a mid-range laptop—nothing fancy, but it should have been snappy. Instead, Windows 11 felt like it was wading through molasses. Every click was accompanied by a spinning cursor. The Start Menu was cluttered with "Spotify," "Prime Video," and "Candy Crush"—apps he had never asked for and would never use. Worst of all, he was halfway through a crucial work document when a full-screen prompt appeared, urging him to "Finish setting up your device" with a Microsoft 365 subscription.

Mark didn’t want a subscription. He wanted his computer to work.

He had tried the manual route. He had gone into the Settings app, toggling switches he didn’t fully understand. He had run PowerShell commands he found on random tech forums, only to break his weather widget and leave weird residue in his registry. He felt defeated. Modern operating systems weren’t built for users anymore; they were built for data extraction and ad delivery.

The Discovery

Desperate and running on caffeine, Mark opened a new browser tab and typed: how to make windows 11 fast and private.

The search results were a swamp of clickbait. But near the top was a video title that caught his eye: Windows 11 Debloat Script – Chris Titus Tech.

Mark clicked. He watched a man with a calm, pragmatic demeanor walk through the exact frustrations Mark was feeling. It wasn’t just a "how-to" video; it was a manifesto. The man, Chris Titus, didn't just offer a fix; he offered control. He spoke about how Windows 11, out of the box, was in a "consumer state"—bloated with telemetry, trial software, and unnecessary services.

And then, the magic words appeared on the screen: The Windows Utility.

The Tool

Mark paused the video and navigated to the GitHub repository. It looked surprisingly simple. No complex installer, no heavy software package. It was a PowerShell script.

The instructions were minimal. He just had to open PowerShell as Administrator and paste a single line of code: windows 11 debloat chris titus

iwr -useb https://christitus.com/win | iex

He hesitated. For a tech enthusiast, running a script directly from the web is usually a cardinal sin. It’s how you get infected with malware. But he had watched the video. He saw the code. It was open-source, transparent, and widely vetted by the community.

Mark took a breath and hit Enter.

The Transformation

A blue window popped up inside the terminal. It wasn't the scary, text-based interface Mark feared. It was a GUI—a clean, organized menu with tabs: Install, Tweaks, Config, Updates.

This was the moment Mark realized this wasn't just a "cleaner." It was a cockpit.

He clicked the Tweaks tab first. His eyes widened. There were lists of checkboxes, neatly categorized.

Mark leaned forward. It was like Chris Titus had read his mind. He didn't have to hunt through ten different sub-menus in the Settings app to find where Microsoft hid the "Don't show me ads" toggle. It was all right here.

He clicked "Run Tweaks."

The terminal sprang to life. Text scrolled rapidly. Mark watched as the script went to war with his operating system.

For five minutes, the script worked. It was surgical. It didn't just delete files; it modified the registry, stripped permissions, and disabled services that had been draining his system resources since the day he unboxed the laptop.

The Purge

When the script finished, Mark rebooted.

The login screen was different. The usual "Tips and tricks" background was gone, replaced by a simple, dark grey.

He logged in. The desktop loaded instantly. No spinning circle. No "Preparing your desktop" message. Switch tabs using your keyboard's left/right arrows

Mark opened the Start Menu. It was empty.

Not "empty" like broken—empty like a fresh sheet of paper. No Candy Crush. No TikTok. No "Microsoft Edge is 50% faster!" prompts. Just the file explorer, the settings, and his documents. It was clean. It was professional. It was what Windows should have been from day one.

He right-clicked on the desktop. Immediately, the full context menu appeared. No more clicking "Show more options." It just worked.

The CPU utilization, previously hovering at a constant 40% idle, dropped to 2%. The memory usage fell from 6GB to 3.5GB. The laptop fans, which usually whined like a jet engine, fell silent.

Taking Control

But the story didn't end there. Mark opened the Windows Utility again (he saved the script this time). He navigated to the Install tab.

Here, he found the second half of the equation. The debloat had removed the junk, but he still needed his tools. Usually, this meant hours of searching websites, downloading installers, and clicking "Next" a hundred times.

The Utility had a section for Install Programs. It used a package manager called Winget and Chocolatey.

Mark selected the boxes for:

He clicked Install.

He watched as the utility opened separate windows, downloaded the latest versions of the software directly from the source, and installed them silently. There were no "Do you want to install the Ask Toolbar?" prompts. No bundled adware. Just the software he wanted, installed clean and fast.

The Outcome

By 3:00 AM, Mark wasn't tired anymore. He felt a sense of empowerment he hadn't felt with a computer in years.

In the past, fixing a computer meant fighting against the manufacturer's intentions. You had to hack, slash, and pray you didn't break the system. But the Chris Titus Windows Utility changed the dynamic. It didn't just strip the OS down to nothing; it gave the user a dashboard to build it back up the way they wanted it. He hesitated

Mark closed his laptop. The next morning, he opened it to start work. The battery life indicator showed 95%. Usually, overnight idle drained it to 80%. The extra hours of battery life were the result of silencing the hundreds of background telemetry processes that had been constantly pinging Microsoft's servers.

He opened a browser and sent a link to his colleague.

"You know how your computer feels slow?" Mark typed. "Stop complaining. Run this."

He attached the link to the Chris Titus Tech utility.

For Mark, Windows 11 was no longer a rental property where the landlord kept checking in. It was his house. And thanks to a simple script, he had finally changed the locks.

The Chris Titus Tech (CTT) Windows Utility (Winutil) is an open-source PowerShell tool designed to streamline Windows 11 by removing telemetry, uninstalling pre-installed "bloatware," and optimizing background services. 1. Launching the Utility

The utility is run directly from PowerShell without installation.

Open Terminal (Admin): Right-click the Start button and select Terminal (Admin) or Windows PowerShell (Admin).

Execute the Command: Copy and paste the following command into the terminal and press Enter:irm https://christitus.com/win | iex(The irm command downloads the script, and iex executes it.)

Initialization: The utility will download and launch a graphical user interface (GUI). 2. Recommended Debloating Steps

Once the tool is open, navigate through the tabs to apply changes: Debloat Windows FAST in 5 Minutes (Revo + Chris Titus Tool)

  • Inspect Services: msconfig or Get-Service | Where-Object … and disable nonessential ones.
  • Inspect Startup: Task Manager > Startup and disable unwanted entries.
  • Reboot and test Windows Update, Store, peripherals.
  • Warning: While this script is considered safe, any system modification carries a risk. Backup your data before proceeding.

    After a few seconds, a blue and gray console GUI will load. It is not your typical PowerShell text dump; it is a menu with tabs at the top.

    You don't need to remove everything. For a stable, maintainable Windows 11:

  • Go to Installers → Select Bulk Install Light (adds Firefox, LibreOffice, VLC, Notepad++).
  • Reboot.
  • Your system will be cleaner, faster, and still fully functional for updates, gaming, and productivity.