Are you looking to make your Windows PC snappier and lighter? Well, I’ve found the safest app to tweak Windows without breaking it. And no, it’s not a one-click debloat script — those are dangerous and can ruin your PC. Trust me, I learned it the hard way.
Why I Stopped Trusting ‘Black Box’ Scripts
Whenever you look up how to remove bloat from Windows, the first thing you find is a bunch of debloat scripts. Yes, these scripts work and give you the option to select the changes you’d like to make. However, if you’re like me, you won’t understand what half of those tweaks do to your system and most certainly won’t know the consequences the debloating could cause.
Well, I experienced those consequences in the form of annoying bugs, blue screens of death (BSoD), and ultimately a few Windows reinstalls. The thing is, unless you understand all the Windows jargon, you can’t fully control the changes these scripts make. And once you’ve run those scripts and something breaks, you’ll have a hard time pinpointing which specific script caused it.
Wintoys Actually Explains What the Toggles Do
Wintoys fills the gaps those debloat scripts leave unaddressed. If you hover over a toggle, you get a description of what it does. It’s less of a debloating tool and more of a Windows tweaking and system-optimization app, which is what we actually need. I mean, the end goal is to make Windows snappier, lighter, and more private. Right?
Also, in the description of each toggle, Wintoys gives you a recommended action, which is pretty helpful. You have to go through each toggle, understand its purpose, and choose to turn it on or off. Sounds intimidating, but trust me, this is the right way to go about tweaking Windows. You don’t want a one-click solution that ends up breaking your workstation.
The ‘Restore’ Button I Wish I Had Earlier
Wintoys has a Restore option under Settings → Miscellaneous → Restoration. Now, almost all the debloat tools out there have a restore or revert button. However, my experience with them wasn’t good because even after reverting all the changes, there were many permanent tweaks at the registry level that I couldn’t revert to stock.
With Wintoys, the changes you make to your system are easily reversible because most of them are triggered by a toggle that you can turn on or off anytime. So, this practically gives you two levels of restoration — one toggle at a time or all toggles back to default values. So far, I haven’t experienced a single glitch in my system, having tested both ways to revert settings.
Wintoys Tweaks I Recommend
The changes I’ve applied using Wintoys haven’t hurt my PC in any way. In fact, I’ve gained a pretty solid understanding of what the app has done to make those changes, thanks to the descriptions it provides. Also, Wintoys hides most of the potentially dangerous options under Tweaks → Superuser, which I completely avoid tinkering with.
Here are some tweaks that have really improved my overall Windows experience. Feel free to check out the other options too, as it has plenty on offer.
1. Background Apps
I don’t like apps running in the background when I’m not using them, so I turn this feature off. It says that some apps might not work properly, but it hasn’t broken anything in my 2-month testing. You can find it in the Performance tab.
2. Activity History
Another Performance tweak I make is to turn off Windows’ ability to track my app, services, and website usage. It can be useful if you have multiple PCs that you want synced together, but for my single PC setup, I prefer to free up resources used for this feature by killing it altogether.
3. Search Indexing
If you haven’t already, I recommend shifting all your Windows search needs to Everything — you get instant results, and it’s one of the lightest Windows apps out there. Once you have this app, you can freely turn off Search Indexing in the Performance tab, as it’s a slow and resource-hungry Windows feature that’s been ruining the Windows experience since the XP days.
4. Delivery Optimization
This feature is related to Windows Updates, where the OS uses your PC as a sort of torrent client to share updates between you and other users, minimizing Microsoft’s server usage. This can hog your system resources, especially RAM and internet bandwidth. That’s why I recommend turning it off in the Performance tab.
5. Hibernation
Hibernation isn’t necessarily bad for your PC — however, it does consume hard disk space, and, in the long run, it’s still better to shut your PC down instead of hibernating it or putting it to sleep. I prefer to turn it off to save space and force myself to shut down the system each time. You can find it in the Health tab in Wintoys.
Start Menu, under Tweaks, has a bunch of options, which I tend to turn off altogether. I like my Start menu minimal, mainly showing just my pinned apps. I don’t want app suggestions from Microsoft or web results while searching for installed apps in the Start menu.
7. Privacy
Privacy has a ton of options that you can find in the Tweaks tab. I have everything turned off except Location and Error Reporting. There are some features that might be helpful for your use cases, like Online Speech Recognition and Camera On/Off Indicator, so do check them out.
8. Ads
In the Tweaks tab, you have a list of options to customize how ads work in Windows. If you’ve already set up your system according to your needs, turning all of these off doesn’t hurt. That’s what I’ve done without any issues — it keeps the OS nice and clean.
9. Digital Markets Act
You’ll find this under Tweaks → System. It’s a European act that basically lets you uninstall apps like Microsoft Edge and OneDrive. These apps don’t have an uninstall option out of the box.
Choose Wintoys If You Want Reliability
Wintoys has many more features that you’ll enjoy exploring. It’s a great system management tool that gives you so much control over your PC without the risk of bricking it, unlike the one-click debloat scripts that often do more harm than good. It offers reliable tweaks that you can safely apply on your main workstation — just be very careful with the Superuser options.