- What: Microsoft released a fix for a Windows 10 Recovery Environment bug
- Impact: Affected Windows 10 users may have had issues with system recovery
OSes Microsoft finally gets around to fixing Windows 10 Recovery Environment after breaking it in October Released from the curse of the update bork fairy Richard Speed Fri 6 Mar 2026 // 11:38 UTC Microsoft has finally fixed a Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE) bug it introduced in Windows 10's final update. The October 14, 2025 update - released the same day Windows 10 reached end of support - broke WinRE on affected devices, preventing it from launching. That same release also left USB devices like keyboards and mice unavailable to some Windows 11 users in the recovery environment, prompting Microsoft to rush out an out-of-band patch. Yet for a subset of Windows 10 users, WinRE problems lingered. The Windows Recovery Environment is a critical last-resort tool when Windows repeatedly fails to boot. Users can also access it by interrupting the boot process... unless Microsoft has released an update that has broken it for a given device. Microsoft's fix (KB5068164), covering Windows 10 21H2 and 22H2, offers no technical explanation, just a terse note that it "addresses" the known issue where "WinRE would not start after installing the October 14, 2025, update." Microsoft Copilot to hijack your browser... for your own convenience Malware-laced OpenClaw installers get Bing AI search boost Apple's budget-friendly MacBook Neo is bursting with color and compromise Bootleg Windows, Office scheme crashes, triggers 22-month lockup for Florida woman Breaking the recovery environment on the day an OS reaches end of life, and then taking months to fix it, is not a good look. It will do little to reassure administrators or end users already skeptical of Microsoft's quality control. Those still on Windows 10 can remain covered through Microsoft's Extended Security Updates program, however, that's cold comfort when a botched patch disables the very tools meant to rescue a broken system. With luck, the latest update will bring to an end the saga of borked WinRE updates, at least for the time being. ® Share More about Windows More like these × More about Windows Narrower topics Bitlocker BSoD PowerShell Windows 10 Windows 11 Windows 2000 Windows 7 Windows 8 Windows Server Windows Subsystem for Linux Windows XP WPF Broader topics Microsoft Operating System More about Share POST A COMMENT More about Windows More like these × More about Windows Narrower topics Bitlocker BSoD PowerShell Windows 10 Windows 11 Windows 2000 Windows 7 Windows 8 Windows Server Windows Subsystem for Linux Windows XP WPF Broader topics Microsoft Operating System TIP US OFF Send us news