Question Best gaming Os with this thread´s post description

elreydelaswas1

Commendable
Jun 25, 2022
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Most gaming technologically advanced Os without inbuilt spy software; and software that begins the process that installs spy software; and with cloud download reset feature; that can be used on the most gaming technologically advanced Motherboard firmware, Motherboard BIOS, and Motherboard Intel Me without inbuilt spy software; and software that begins the process that installs spy software; that can be installed in the PC with the following hardware specifications: A GeIL CL16-16-16 D4-24008 Model Name 8 GMB RAM Card, ROG MAXIMUS XI Gene Model Name Motherboard, Intel Core i7-8700 Model Name Processor, and NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Super Model Name 4 VRAM GPU?. What are the most gaming technologically advanced Motherboard firmware, Motherboard BIOS, and Motherboard Intel Me without inbuilt spy software; and software that begins the process that installs spy software; that can be installed in the PC with the following hardware specifications: A GeIL CL16-16-16 D4-24008 Model Name 8 GB RAM Card, ROG MAXIMUS XI Gene Model Name Motherboard, Intel Core i7-8700 Model Name Processor, and NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Super Model Name 4 VRAM GPU in the most gaming technologically advanced Os without inbuilt spy software; and software that begins the process that installs spy software; and with cloud download reset feature?.
 
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please answer me from a
Windows/Microsoft, Apple or Linux OS which will be the OS that best matches what i asked
If I say Windows 10 or 11, you'll say "spyware!"
If I say Apple, you might say "but activation!"
If I say Linux, "you might say "not for games!"

As mentioned above, the main vulnerability is the user.

For me, a properly configured Win 10 or 11, used by a clueful user, is the answer.
 
Forums only work when you answer questions posed by those trying to help.

If you want secure, look at one of the BSD variants. Not good for gaming, but can be secure.

Your original post, and multiple edits, remains unclear. You are asking for help with something that is not really an OS question, but more of a human use question.

You can secure Windows easily. Securing how you use is completely up to you.
 
Have separate boot drives and using a multi-drive bay adapter. I use an Icydock brand (thats not made anymore) but similar to this: https://www.amazon.com/StarTech-com-Aluminum-Trayless-Mobile-Backplane/dp/B00HS23QZO

I would install Windows on one drive, with no other drives installed, for casual use. You can wipe the drive anytime you want. You will not use this OS to access critical sites like financials.
<power down and eject this drive>

Insert the 2nd drive, power on, and Install Linux (or Windows again if you wish).
Ubuntu is fairly straight forward to learn with a large user support base with no other drive installed. Use this as your secured system. Do not access any casual things or game on this drive.
<power down and eject this drive.

Install a storage drive if you need one, or more.

Insert the Windows casual boot drive.

Create a full shutdown command shortcut. (win10 & 11 only deep sleep when you tell it to shutdown)

If you plan on sharing the storage drive between two windows boot drives then you will need to set both windows OS's to not 'Run Disk check' the storage drives porperties/options.

From then on you only have to have the drive you wish to boot from inserted before you power on your system. You can leave the other ejected but still remaining in the drive bay.

If anything "bad" from the casual Windows writes to the storage drive, it cannot cross to the secured drive unless you are dumb enough to run or open a file from there.

As always, make backups, they make reinstalling your OS a breeze.