Windows 11 IoT LTSC 24H2 26100.3775 [EN+] Lite Edition 1.88Gb

Gaming Windows 11 IoT Enterprise 24H2 – a smooth, no-bloat build for home use, in both English and Russian. Experience comfort without Microsoft clutter!
This build is designed to feel like your favorite pair of slippers — lightweight, comfortable, and hassle-free. No constant pop-ups, no ads, no Defender screaming at you, no endless updates, no Edge forced down your throat. Just a clean system that lets you enjoy your PC.
Stripping down Windows is the right move — but only if it’s done wisely. Features that matter should still work. That’s exactly our philosophy at Revision. We don’t go overboard — our Lite builds are carefully trimmed to keep only what’s truly useful for the majority of users. For extra compatibility, we also include .NET Framework 3.5, DirectPlay, and SMB 1.0 — because you might need them.
The build comes with full EN/RU dual-language support, and everything unnecessary has been turned off: no Defender, no SmartScreen, no kernel isolation, no Microsoft noise. Just a clean system for gaming or everyday use.
Important notes before installing:
Windows Update, Microsoft Store, and Component modifications are disabled. What you see is what you get — check the screenshots to make sure it fits your needs.
The pagefile is reduced to 1 GB by default. If you have low RAM, we recommend setting it back to default for better performance.
Some users may point to even smaller builds — but keep in mind, this one includes essential extras: .NET Framework, trusted browsers, and dual-language interface. Plus, it’s based on Windows 11 IoT LTSC 24H2, not the lighter (but limited) Home SL.
Date of update: April 12, 2025
Version: Windows 11 IoT LTSC (26100.3775-24H2) Lite Game Edition
Bit depth: 64-bit
Interface Language: ENG English, RUS Russian
Tablet: we recommend MAS HWID activator
Original source: www.microsoft.com
Build author: by Revision
Image size: 1.88 GB
System requirements for gaming Windows 11 by Revision: 1+ GHz processor (x64), 4+ GB RAM, 64 GB of space, DX11 video card. TPM2/UEFI verification is disabled.
Windows 11 x64 system screenshots
Attention!
This stripped-down version of Windows might occasionally try to install something from Microsoft via Windows Update (spoiler: it won’t succeed). It may force two additional restarts, then give up and move on with life.
Removed Components
Backup, BLB-Client – redundant services; Recovery itself is still intact.
BusinessScanning-Feature – not something a home user ever needs.
Disk-Diagnosis – who needs constant disk speed tests anyway?
IE-Troubleshooters – leftover telemetry from Internet Explorer.
IIS-WebServer – unless you’re hosting a web server on your PC, you don’t need this.
Indexing-Service – file indexing that every power user tries to disable first.
MediaPlayer Legacy – outdated Windows media player.
MSMQ-Client – we’re not even sure what this does, so it’s gone.
More useless stuff removed:
NFS-ClientSKU, OfflineFiles,
PeerToPeer (Microsoft’s weird P2P client),
Printing-XPSServices-RasRip (whatever that is),
RecDisc (Recovery Disc),
SecureStartup (aka BitLocker — the nightmare of many users),
ShareMedia-ControlPanel (who shares media like this in 2025?),
Shell-HomeGroup (just in case — removed),
SimpleTCP (if you’re not a network programmer, you don’t need it),
Plus: SNMP, Telnet, TFTP, WinOcr, WMI SNMP-Provider, Xps-Foundation.
Added
Yandex Browser with auto-install (included in the RU version).
Google Chrome installer (placed on Desktop in the EN version).
Configuration & Tweaks
All system requirements are disabled. But if you're still rocking a 775 socket, sorry — this build won’t boot.
All the crap like Defender, Kernel Isolation, SmartScreen — disabled and fully removed.
Performance patches that throttle gaming (like Meltdown/Spectre mitigations) — completely removed. Your CPU and GPU will finally breathe.
Telemetry tasks – disabled. Microsoft’s Task Scheduler is infamous for dragging down performance. We shut it all down and ripped it out.
Tons of UI fixes — like a proper right-click menu. Seriously, why did Microsoft make such a dumb context menu in Windows 11? We restored the classic one for sanity.
Copy/Move To – added right into the context menu. Select a file or folder, and send it wherever you want. A tiny change that saves huge time. Weird that Microsoft still hasn’t made this default.
Heads Up!
The pagefile is locked to 1 GB. If you’re on older hardware with limited RAM, switch it back to automatic or your system might freeze up when launching heavy games.
Additional Notes
If you're not a complete idiot, you understand that a trimmed-down build won’t always tick every single box. Maybe it’s right for you, maybe not. Don’t expect miracles — Windows 11 24H2 is getting pickier every year. You have to tame it like a stubborn donkey.
Most users just follow Microsoft’s lead like sheep. Smart ones aim for control and freedom.
Форум - живое обсуждение Windows 11 IoT LTSC 24H2 26100.3775 [EN+] Lite Edition 1.88Gb