What this does
Turn on System Restore on the system drive and create a manual restore point before risky changes.
Restore points are often unavailable simply because protection was never enabled for the system drive.
In plain language, enable system restore and create a restore point matters because System Restore is disabled by default on some installs. People usually start looking this up when cleanup tools turned it off. Restore points are often unavailable simply because protection was never enabled for the system drive.
How and why
In practice, enable system restore and create a restore point matters because System Restore is disabled by default on some installs. Restore points are often unavailable simply because protection was never enabled for the system drive. A good next step is to review turn on protection before deep tuning or debloat work. Then decide whether you only needed the explanation or whether you want a practical action page too.
You normally review enable system restore and create a restore point when you want to understand what Windows is doing, what changes it can influence, and whether it is relevant before you touch settings blindly. Useful things to notice first: turn on protection before deep tuning or debloat work; keep some free disk space for restore points; name restore points clearly; create one before driver or registry changes.
- enable protection on C:
- create a named restore point
- confirm restore storage is not set too low
- repeat before risky maintenance work