Six months later, Marcus wasn't just a user. He was a convert. He ran the script on his gaming PC, his work laptop, even his dad's old Dell. Each time, the machine transformed. Sluggish e-waste became responsive hardware.
"No. This machine is mine."
The philosophy was simple:
A week later, a Windows Update ran. The debloat held. The settings persisted. Because Chris Titus's script didn't just kill processes; it configured Group Policies and Registry keys that told Windows no at a deep, structural level. It was a vaccine, not a painkiller.
Marcus was skeptical. He’d seen "debloaters" before—tools that broke Windows Update, disabled Defender, or just ran taskkill on processes that would instantly respawn. But Chris Titus Tech had a reputation: Functional, not fundamentalist.