this post was submitted on 13 Mar 2026
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askchapo
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This is one to be wary of - Windows will frequently clear out the UEFI table, which means deleting all boot entries aside from its own. If your installs are on one drive, this becomes complicated to fix. I can only assume this is deliberate because there's no reason for it other than trying to convince people trying Linux that it just randomly breaks.
If your linux install is on its own drive, you just boot from that drive in legacy mode, and GRUB will automatically restore all the UEFI entries for you before you notice.
damn that sucks i gave windows my Nme drive. i have a good ssd 1 tb also