Quote:
Originally Posted by masraum
Before Windows updates, it creates a "Restore Point" which is like a snapshot of it's state before the update. That way if you have a problem after the update, you can just go back to that restore point which should be from just before the update. That would be better than uninstalling which may not get everything.
How to Restore Windows 10 to an Earlier Restore Point - Windows 10
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It used to create them by default, that was my prior experience. Seems it's changed.
On a fresh install, actually 2 in the last 3 months, restore points were not automagically enabled, had to manually turn it on.
Best to take 10 seconds to check and make sure it's actually on.