What is System Requirements Not Met Watermark?

If you have seen or installed an Insider build, you already know about the watermark. It appears in the form of text at the bottom-right of the screen. This new watermark will be on similar lines and displays the text as— System Requirements Not Met Build No 12345. Along with this, the message is also shown on the System section of the settings.

Remove System Requirements Not Met notification on Windows 11

If you see System Requirements Not Met watermark on Windows 11 desktop or notification in System Settings, you can edit the Registry to remove it.

Open the Run prompt, type regedit, and then press Shift + EnterIt will open the Registry Editor, but you will be prompted by the UAC prompt. Make sure to press the Yes button.Navigate to the following key

Right-click on the SV2 DWORD and choose modifySet the value to 0Restart the PC, and the watermark should be gone for good.

In case you do not see UnsupportedHardwareNotificationCache key, you need to create it manually. This process will remove the watermark from the Desktop and the System Settings section. In the Group Policy Editor, you will see the Hide messages when Windows system requirements are not met setting here:

If you are not seeing any of this because this process is being rolled out soon, or you may have a compatible PC, and you will never see it. Having a watermark on the PC doesn’t matter, but it does come in between screenshots. It is also an annoying thing for those who want to keep their Desktop clean. So if you don’t like this, you can remove the System Requirements Not Met watermark.

How to find if Windows 11 meets System Requirements?

You can download and install the PC Health Check app and then run it to determine if Windows 11 is compatible with your PC. The app makes every check recommended by Microsoft to determine if one can install it and if the check fails.

How do I enable the TPM Module on my PC?

You can enable TPM from UEFI or BIOS if the motherboard supports it. At the same time, most modern hardware comes with an onboard TPM module or similar, which can be enabled from the Security section. If not, the only option available for Desktop is to install one if the board supports it.