Steam now offers a quick way to check if your PC has Secure Boot enabled. That's probably not information you care to fill your brain up with right now, but you might need to know [[link]] it at some point soon as the latest games begin to require it to keep cheaters away.
Secure Boot is a security feature within the UEFI and used for signing Kernel-level code that runs on [[link]] your PC to ensure it's not, er, dodgy. The idea is, if everyone agrees to sign their code using cryptographic keys, an OS and its apps can be more confident that malicious software is not running in the background, such as a rootkit or low-level cheat software.
"...man, I wish we didn't have to turn on Secure Boot," back in August.
"It sucks that there's the friction for Secure Boot. Obviously, we're doing as much as we can to educate people and provide facts and things like that, but at the end of the day, we just decided that was a trade-off that was worth it … As we look around the industry, we see that's a trend other people are heading towards as well," Buhl continues.
So, you might want to know whether Secure Boot is turned on or not in the near-future. Valve has added a quick way to check in the latest version of the Steam beta:
- Head to Help > System Information in the top navigation bar
- Scroll down to 'Operating System'
You'll also find information about the TPM version here. TPM, or Trusted Platform Module, is a tiny hardware block filled with secrets. Generally, this block lives inside your CPU, rather than on an actual dedicated chip, but it essentially allows your PC to partition cryptographic operations away from the rest of your processor to run them more securely.
Microsoft generally recommends turning Secure Boot on with Windows 11 PCs, and PCs must be capable [[link]] of running it, though it's not required to simply boot the OS. What is required for Windows 11 is a TPM. That, or you bypass the whole requirement altogether with a tool such as Rufus, though you will fall foul of any checks against it.
Both Secure Boot and a TPM need to be enabled in your BIOS to run. How to do this depends on your motherboard manufacturer but here are some links that might help with that:
Valve says this info will land in the Hardware Survey soon enough, meaning we can check to see how many PC gamers are actually enabling the setting. Oh, and if you prefer, you can also check for Secure Boot in your System Information. No need to grab Steam for that.