: Many "Lite" versions, such as Tiny11 or Ghost Spectre , remove the strict hardware requirements for TPM 2.0 and Secure Boot, allowing installation on unsupported older PCs.
The "Superlite" designation is not just about removing a few apps; it's a surgical strike on the Windows operating system. Below is a table comparing a standard Windows 11 Pro installation to a typical 22H2 Superlite version.
To minimize background CPU usage and maximize available RAM, developers strip out: Windows 11 Pro 22H2 22621.1105 Lite Superlite...
Two names dominate this niche: and NTDEV's Tiny11 .
| Test | Stock Windows 11 Pro 22H2 | Superlite 22621.1105 | |------|---------------------------|------------------------| | Boot to desktop (from POST) | 27 seconds | 14 seconds | | RAM usage (clean boot) | 2.9 GB | 890 MB | | File Explorer launch | 0.8 sec | 0.3 sec | | Cinebench R23 (multicore) | 4120 | 4180 (within margin) | | PCMark 10 (Essentials) | 8,100 | 9,950 | | Disk space used | 24 GB | 6.2 GB | : Many "Lite" versions, such as Tiny11 or
Often running on as little as 1.5 GB to 2 GB of RAM, compared to 4 GB+ on standard Windows 11.
Pre-installed runtimes like .NET Framework and Visual C++ to ensure gaming compatibility. To minimize background CPU usage and maximize available
Based on known community practices, this build likely includes:
You might ask: Why not the latest 23H2 or 24H2?