

Nothing apart from windows needs that much. Its more a security concern I have, Vanguard gives itself ring 0 access. Once in BIOS, make sure it is in advanced mode, and then make sure that TPM is enabled. I was getting one a week and it turned out to be latency. I feel its way too much to expect for one game. Who do you blame? its an arms race and where does the paying customer draw the line? (if its free, this is a difficult line to draw) So 7 keys, each 2048 bit, can be stored within Non-Volatile Memory (NVM) and 3 keys, each 2048 bit, can be stored within Random Access Memory (RAM) of the TPM. Then you could maybe fake it, but the battle against piracy and cheating has led to point where they have to fully control PC to let you install the game and play it. Additionally, we can store 7 persistent keys (permanent until flushed by the user) and 3 transient keys on OPTIGA TPM 2.0 (SLB9670). If vanguard believed what system told it, it wouldn't need Ring 0. It can block other programs from running. Both of these are security technologies that allow Windows 11 to boot programs using a higher standard of trust and safety. A lot of users have been facing the two key issues of Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 and Secure Boot on Windows 11. Vanguard thinks it owns the PC and you have to do what it says. To run Valorant on your PC, you need to make sure you satisfy the minimum system requirements.

I also feel its way too much control to give something that is only there for one game. I feel it would be difficult to hide anything from it at that level
