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Nearly a third of all gaming PCs are still running Windows 10, even as Microsoft prepare to kill it
Game Updates

Nearly a third of all gaming PCs are still running Windows 10, even as Microsoft prepare to kill it

by admin October 3, 2025


It must have been a stressful few days for Microsoft. Game Pass changes nobody likes, admitting the first Xbox-branded handheld costs a thousand bucks, having to tell the Israeli military that they need to see other people. Yeesh. No wonder they’re so intent on blowing off steam by taking a scythe to Windows 10 security updates this month, a move that will effectively end official support for the operating system.

With previous Windows version cutoffs, this would have been standard circle-of-life stuff. One system perishes, another is nourished with its bone meal. Except Windows 10 remains in use by millions of PC owners and players, mere days before its scheduled slaying on October 14th.

The exact proportion depends on who you ask, but it’s always a chunky one. The most recent Steam hardware survey puts Windows 10 usage at 32%, showing a strong affinity for the older OS even while most respondents (63%) are on Windows 11. Meanwhile, per The Register, Statcounter’s random sample of assorted web users suggests that just over 40% of all PCs have stuck with Windows 10. That’s barely behind the Windows 11 figure of 49%.

By comparison, Windows 8 and 8.1 merely accounted for 4% of PCs shortly before they had their security updates binned in January 2023, according to Statcounter. So there’s evidently something unusually compelling about Windows 10 – or, perhaps, something offputting about Windows 11 – that’s keeping it disproportionately popular in its final hours. I’ll attest to that, actually. While, as current custodian of the RPS Rig, I’ve long had it running the latest version, I remain too accustomed to the Win10 interface to budge from it on my personal PC.

Sadly, there’s more to this than UI comparisons and market share pie charts. As The Reg point out, it’s one thing to leave unpatched security vulnerabilities on a handful of weirdo Windows 8 holdouts, and another thing entirely to wilfully put millions upon millions of Windows 10 users at risk. For an example of the kind of weakness that would go unfixed, this past June, Microsoft were forced to close a Secure Boot vulnerability that would allow malware wielders to disable your PC’s other security tools before seizing control of the OS. That’s the same Secure Boot, of course, that Battlefield 6 and Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 are making a mandatory system requirement.

There may be other, less dire but more widely-spread consequences, too. Capcom, for instance, recently warned that multiple recent Monster Hunter games might cease to work on Windows 10 after the 14th.

It wouldn’t be surprising to see a last-minute tilt towards Windows 11, as users realise they’ve run out of procrastination time. I’ll be switching over myself, though that’s mainly because I use this rig for work and Ian Games Network said I had to. If you’re determined to stand by Windows 10, the closest thing to a concession that Microsoft will offer is the Windows 10 ESU (Extended Security Updates) programme, where you can get a year of extra updates for free, no strings attached, if you live in the European Economic Area. If not, you can still enrol by either a) backing up your Windows 10 PC, b) spending 1,000 Microsoft Rewards points, whatever those are, or c) just bunging Microsoft your local equivalent of $30 USD in cash. No, that is not a joke. Well, in a sense it is. Just not the funny kind.



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October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Capcom warn that Monster Hunter Rise, World and Wilds might not run on Windows 10 PCs after October 14th
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Capcom warn that Monster Hunter Rise, World and Wilds might not run on Windows 10 PCs after October 14th

by admin September 29, 2025


Your cuddly dinosaur aunties at Capcom have warned that they can’t “guarantee” various Monster Hunter games will run on Windows 10 PCs after uncle Microsoft end support for the operating system on October 14th this year.

When that fateful day comes to pass, Capcom “will no longer guarantee that Monster Hunter: World, Monster Hunter Rise and Monster Hunter Wilds will run on Windows 10 systems.” Which isn’t to say that these games will immediately become unplayable, but “future system updates or game title updates may make the game incompatible on Windows 10 systems”.

The developers add that if you have trouble with those Monster Hunter games on Windows 10 PCs after October 14th, “support can only be provided based on information from before support for Windows 10 was discontinued”, as they’ll be discontinuing services for investigating problems when playing on Windows 10.

If this is the first you’ve heard of Windows 10 being sunsetted/given the old heave-ho/left crying by the roadside, Microsoft have said that Windows 10 apps and drivers will continue to boot and run normally after the cessation of official support, but you won’t get any more free security updates, bug fixes and big feature updates.

It’s not quite as cut-and-dried as that in practice. Microsoft 365 apps running on personal and commercial Windows 10 PCs will get security updates until October 10th 2028, and feature updates until August 2026.

Microsoft are also offering a paid extended security update subscription for people who want to maintain Windows 10 beyond the cut-off date, with availability dependent on region and which version of the OS you’re running. In good news for people resident in the European Economic Area, Microsoft have bowed to pressure from consumer protection organisation Euroconsumers (via Particle Collider Gamer) by making ESU updates free in the EEA until October 2026.

Windows10mageddon threatens to leave a lot of PC users in the lurch, though there’s a certain amount of Y2K-style hysteria about the fallout. According to one study, around half of Windows PCs still don’t run Windows 11. If your machine doesn’t have the specs for Windows 11, it seems like you’ll need to buy a fresh one. I expect there will be plenty more bulletins from game publishers encouraging players to update their systems.

This article has been updated to mention Microsoft’s recent decision to make ESU updates free to people in the EEA until October 2026.



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September 29, 2025 0 comments
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The industry can’t afford to overlook low-spec PCs | Opinion
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The industry can’t afford to overlook low-spec PCs | Opinion

by admin September 19, 2025


It is with a heavy heart and a note of regret that I inform you (those of you who have blessedly managed to avoid this knowledge thus far, at least) that Randy Pitchford is at it again.

I’ll spare you the specifics of the Gearbox boss’s latest social media escapades (if you’re interested, Nathan Brown had a very entertaining write-up in Hit Points this week), but the gist is simple. The company’s new game, Borderlands 4, has launched with some fairly significant performance issues, and Pitchford chose to address these in part by telling consumers that this is their own fault for not knowing how to use their PCs properly.

Not great! As it turns out, some of the performance issues also extend to consoles – for now, the suggested solution for what appears to be a memory leak causing performance to get worse and worse over time is to periodically reboot your console.

Gearbox is being much more constructive about fixing the issues than Pitchfork’s ill-tempered posting would suggest, too, quickly issuing a patch that fixed a few of the issues, and the studio is presumably working hard on further improvements. (The game itself, by all accounts, is very good once you get past the performance problems.)

Borderlands 4 has reviewed well, but users have reported PC performance issues | Image credit: Gearbox Software/2K

A company boss ill-advisedly lashing out at his own consumers is deserving of rolled eyes, but not of too much attention – any discussion focusing on that aspect is inevitably going to be far more heat than light.

This whole affair doesn’t live in isolation, though; it’s just the latest chapter in the ongoing narrative of not one, but two of the biggest bugbears consumers have with the games business.

The first of those is something of a closed case, even if it remains a source of intense annoyance for many consumers. I refer to the whole question of the validity of shipping games that are clearly broken in some key technical ways, with the intention of quickly patching them after launch.

The perception of games as an expensive hobby is arguably the single biggest threat facing the industry right now

That’s a debate and a source of frustration that’s as old as the ability to patch games itself. I have some sympathy for the old-school view that we were all better off back when console games lived on a read-only disc or cartridge and couldn’t be patched, given the extent to which that capacity is now abused.

The argument overall was lost many years ago, though, and if anything platform holders have become increasingly permissive about the technical state of software releases and the use of day-one patches. PC, of course, has always been the Wild West in this regard anyway.

What is much more pressing, and far more active, is the discussion over game pricing and the cost of gaming as a hobby. Pitchford waded into that a while back by arguing that real fans of Borderlands would pay $80 for the game, though it did eventually launch at $70. Whether he intended to or not, his latest comments also jab directly on that exposed nerve.

The perception of games as an expensive hobby is arguably the single biggest threat facing the industry right now. The facts about inflation and development costs are much less important than the perception and emotions around this topic. Consumers shifting to a belief that games are expensive and overpriced undermines one of the key pillars of the medium’s appeal, namely its excellent value in terms of entertainment received for money paid.

“Why am I going to spend $80 for this game when Fortnite is here?” asked Circana’s Mat Piscatella in a recent analysis of game pricing | Image credit: Epic Games

We’ve talked a lot in the past few months about console pricing, and AAA game pricing, and even the potential re-engagement with “whale” strategies as a recession countermeasure for some games. Alongside these, it’s also worth discussing the occasionally staggering increases in the cost of PC hardware, especially since PC gaming is often presented as a refuge from the rising prices of console hardware and software.

Rising PC hardware costs are nothing new. The cost of many key components, especially of GPUs, has been climbing for years, and the incremental benefits of upgrades have not always been impressive. The run on GPUs for cryptocurrency mining priced many gamers out of that market in particular.

The rise of AI hasn’t had quite the same effect (not least since Nvidia has pushed out chips and devices that are more optimised for AI tasks than consumer GPUs), but it has helped to ensure that prices didn’t get a chance to drift back downwards after the crypto rush. New GPUs now can cost comfortably double or triple the price of a PS5 or Switch 2, even for relatively mid-range cards.

That wouldn’t be a huge problem if PC games addressed a wide range of specs, including being optimised for lower-spec machines running older hardware. That’s not an entirely unreasonable ask, given the prevalence of devices like laptops and Steam Decks. Notably, it’s precisely what Epic Games’ Tim Sweeney called for recently, noting that many developers create games for the highest-spec systems and then don’t put sufficient time and resources into optimising for lower-spec hardware.

Tencent Games’ Yong-yi Zhu has emphasised the importance of targeting low-spec PCs | Image credit: Tencent Games

In fact, the situation is arguably worse than Sweeney suggests in some key regards. A lot of new games are going in quite the opposite direction – leaning so heavily on upscaling technologies like DLSS and frame generation for performance as to be practically unplayable on a lot of systems without those technologies enabled.

That’s a problem, because those generative-AI-based technologies mostly require new hardware – GPUs from the last couple of generations, for example, are required for the best versions of both the relatively uncontroversial DLSS and the much more questionable (by which I mean that even to my untrained and myopic eye it looks like absolute rubbish in many games) frame generation tech.

High-end PCs will always be around and will always be a desirable status symbol for gamers. However, PCs can and should also be the industry’s strongest pitch for the affordability argument. They’re capable gaming devices that many, many people already own. You can play games on them through affordable storefronts without buying any expensive new hardware.

It’s a huge risk for the industry if we lose that possibility for PCs to function as entry points

That ought to be incredibly powerful positioning for the platform, but it means embracing low-spec systems, laptops, and yes, even Macs – which are pretty solid gaming devices in their own right now, and incredibly ubiquitous among college-age consumers who are a key demographic for the industry.

The ability to swim upstream and spend thousands on expensive GPUs, VRR capable monitors, and enough RGB lights to send your Christmas tree into early retirement has to be an option for the devoted few, not table stakes for getting involved in PC gaming.

It’s a huge risk for the industry as a whole if we lose that possibility for PCs to function as entry points for new consumers and good-value-for-money devices for those with lower spending power. That’s exactly what’s at risk if a failure to optimise for lower end systems becomes too widespread – leaving consumers with a bad taste in their mouth and a sense that they have to upgrade to play recent games.

Needless to say, it’s Tim Sweeney’s solution that’s by far the more workable approach; getting on social media to blame the gamers themselves for that situation helps nobody.



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September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Borderlands 4 update aims to "improve stability for a wide range of PCs", but comes without proper patch notes
Game Updates

Borderlands 4 update aims to “improve stability for a wide range of PCs”, but comes without proper patch notes

by admin September 15, 2025


Borderlands 4 developers Gearbox have chucked more wrenches at the shooter’s PC performance over the weekend, following issues that’ve landed it mixed Steam review fortunes since launch last week. However, if you’re looking for patch notes, you’re gonna be a bit disappointed. Ah well, at least there are essay-length Randy Pitchford Twitter threads to scroll through if you’re partial to someone waffling about how the game runs.

Initially, Gearbox’s response to the PC performance problems was to publish a massive recommended settings table. Our James had a go at seeing if following it made a tangible difference. While you can and should read his full testing write-up , the short version is that the stuttering many players have reported wasn’t magically wiped away by that guidance.

Cue this latest update, which as Gearbox wrote on Steam, aims to “help improve stability for a wide range of PCs”. Unlike most patches, they declined to get into any nitty-gritty specifics beyond that. There’s a warning that whenever you change your graphics settings, it can take up to 15 minutes for your shaders to recompile, as well as a reposting of those optimisation guides for Nvidia and AMD hardware.

Aside from those, the studio added: “We’re continuing to read your feedback, planning additional updates and will have more details to come”. So, no bullet-pointed patch notes to illustrate exactly how the update’s gone about trying to make things run in a more stable fashion, which seems a strange choice and has understandably raised eyebrows among some players.

Who needs full patch notes, however, when you’ve got Gearbox CEO yammering into the void about Borderlands 4 on the socials. He has at least emphasised that the studio are putting in “significant work on PC performance”. Though, that did come midway through an essay-length thread that began with the declaration: “Every PC gamer must accept the reality of the relationship between their hardware and what the software they are running is doing.”

Every PC gamer must accept the reality of the relationship between their hardware and what the software they are running is doing.

— Randy Pitchford (@DuvalMagic) September 15, 2025

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After shouting at anyone who’s assumed that PCs between minimum and recommended specs “can achieve all of extremely high frame rate, maximum/ultra features, and extremely high resolution”, the tweetman asserted that “there are a few real issues, but they are affecting a very, very small percentage of users.”

In other Borderlands 4 launch-related news, publishers Take-Two took the opportunity to reiterate they aren’t in the “spyware” business via the game’s terms of service agreement. That followed some concern over the contents of such Take-Two docs in terms of data collection earlier this year, with some older Borderlandses briefly being review-bombed.





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September 15, 2025 0 comments
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Lenovo Coupon Codes and Deals: Up to $100 Off PCs
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Lenovo Coupon Codes and Deals: Up to $100 Off PCs

by admin August 23, 2025


Lenovo is currently the biggest PC and laptop company in the world, and they just so happen to make some of our favorite laptops and PC peripherals. In fact, our list of the Best Laptops you can buy include a number of Lenovo devices that we’ve tested and fully recommend, ranging from high-end premium laptops to options for budget-minded shoppers. If you are looking to save a few bucks while shopping for a new Lenovo product, here are the Lenovo coupon codes and special offers you need to know about.

Save up to $100 on Lenovo Back-to-School Deals

Back to school season is a great time to shop for a laptop, and there are already tons of deals across Lenovo’s portfolio of Chromebooks and Windows laptops to search through. We’re a big fan of some of Lenovo’s Chromebooks, in particular, which do a good job straddling the line between price and quality. The Lenovo Chromebook Plus 14 for example, is currently our pick for the Best Chromebook you can buy and is easily the best Chromebook I’ve ever made. Meanwhile, the Lenovo Flex 5i Chromebook Plus is a close second, finding a great price around the $500 mark.

If you are shopping for the upcoming return to school, right now it’s the last call to save an extra $100 off for PCs, tablets, and peripherals. You’ll get the extra savings on all orders that are over $500. The deal ends on August 24 though, so now’s your chance to save some extra cash.

Score Weekly Tech Deals, Price Match Guarantee, and Free Shipping

Beyond the back to school deal, Lenovo has a number of other current offers available when shopping through Lenovo.com. There are weekly deals on PCs and tech that include free shipping with no minimums. For certain products, you can even choose to buy online and pick it up in-store at Best Buy. If you’re looking for more Lenovo recommendations, we’re big fans of the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro, an Android tablet that’s currently on our Best Tablets list. It’s currently discounted by 26%, bringing the price down to $280.

Lenovo is also offering price-matching on any comparable PC, including from many online retailers. That’s really helpful, as it’s not uncommon to see price discrepancies between different retailers.

Get Exclusive Savings With Lenovo Discount Programs

Lenovo does offer a fairly generous discount program for certain demographics as well. These include a 5% off Education, Healthcare, First Responder, and Senior (over 55) discount.

You can use this discount on anything you find at Lenovo.com, which includes a lot more than just Lenovo-branded laptops. For example, Lenovo sells one of our favorite laptop docking stations, the Kensington Triple Video Mobile Dock. Despite its tiny size, this tiny device can power up to three 1080p (or two 4K) displays simultaneously. It’s a great example of the wide diversity of products you can use these discounts and coupon codes on.

My Lenovo Rewards and Sweepstakes Offers

Lenovo has a My Lenovo Rewards system that can earn you points that can be spent on future purchases from Lenovo.com. Almost everything you buy gets you between 3% and 9% back in the form of reward points, and you can start redeeming points right after signing up for an account. 1,000 points is equal to $1 that you can spend on future purchases.

There’s also Lenovo’s Gear Up Sweepstakes that’s currently running for My Lenovo Rewards members. You can enter to win a Legion 5 Gen 10 gaming laptop, a Bluetooth Mouse, a backpack, and true wireless earbuds. The sweepstakes will end on August 24.

Lenovo Financing and Lease-to-Own Options

Lenovo uses Katapult to offer financing and lease-to-own options on its laptops. That might be useful if you’ve been eyeing one of Lenovo’s higher-end laptops. One of our favorite of these is the Lenovo Yoga 9i, a gorgeous 2-in-1 with a bright OLED screen and a luxurious design. This laptop is currently listed as one of our top recommendations for the Best Laptops and Best 2-in-1 Laptop.

Katapult allows you to buy now and pay over time, without charging late fees. If you put down a $45 initial payment, you can check out the laptop today. Katapult offers up to $3,500 in pre-approved leases and allows you to make minimum payments over time or buyout early.



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August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Windows 11 Reset this PC feature
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Microsoft’s August 2025 security updates are breaking recovery tools on Windows 10 and Windows 11 PCs

by admin August 20, 2025



Microsoft has acknowledged an issue with its recent August 2025 security updates that prevent users from resetting or recovering their systems using built-in Windows tools. According the company, the bug affects older versions of Windows 11 including 23H2 and 22H2 as well as Windows 10 22H2, Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2019/2021, and Windows 10 IoT Enterprise LTSC 2019/2021.

Installing this month’s security updates can potentially break the Windows recovery options for users. Those attempting to reinstall Windows without losing their personal files through the Reset this PC feature may run into failures. Similarly, the Fix problems using Windows Update feature, which attempts to reinstall the current version of the OS on your device while preserving all your apps, documents, and settings, is also broken. Microsoft has also warned that the bug could affect IT administrators who rely on the RemoteWipe configuration service provider to reset devices remotely.

According to testing by Windows Latest, attempts to reset a PC on Windows 11 23H2 using the Reset this PC feature causes the process to start and then roll back immediately, leaving the reset incomplete. After this failure, no personal files are lost, but the recovery feature becomes unusable. Additionally, Windows doesn’t give any warning that the reset process can fail, meaning most people won’t realize there’s a problem until they actually try to reset their PC.


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Microsoft has confirmed that it is working on an out-of-band update to fix the issue on all affected platforms. Expect an emergency patch to roll out in the coming days, with further details to be shared once they become available.

While the Windows recovery bug does not affect users on the Windows 11 24H2 update, another serious issue has surfaced with August’s security patch which targets storage drives. The latest Windows 11 update KB5063878 is said to be causing storage drives to vanish under heavy workloads, particularly during large file transfers of 50GB or more. While most drives recover after a system reboot, in certain cases the SSDs are completely inaccessible with corrupted data partitions.

According to early analysis done by X user Nekorusukii (@Necoru_cat), the bug is possibly linked to how a storage device handles caching and metadata mapping. Microsoft is yet to formally recognize the flaw. leaving users that regularly deal with large data transfers in limbo.

Until Microsoft acknowledges and patches these issues, users should wait to reset or restore their systems. We can only hope that this new update rolls out soon.

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August 20, 2025 0 comments
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