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Hello, hope you're all well!

I've encountered an issue. I've installed Windows 11 recently and had no issues in all honesty except last night. I wanted to play Valorant and it pooped out an error saying it needs TPM and secure boot enabled to function.

Going in my BIOS I can't find either CSM option or Secure Boot options anywhere. I've got a MSI H61M-P20 (G3) (MS-7788) motherboard, running latest bios v1.9.

In the sysinfo it says:

BIOS Mode    UEFI
Secure Boot State    Unsupported
PCR7 Configuration    Binding Not Possible
Device Encryption Support    Reasons for failed automatic device encryption: TPM is not usable, PCR7 binding is not supported, Hardware Security Test Interface failed and device is not Modern Standby, Un-allowed DMA capable bus/device(s) detected, TPM is not usable

 


Any advices on what I should do and where should I go? Is there any way to spoof the information at least? With Windows 10 I had no issues.

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https://linustechtips.com/topic/1443847-issues-with-toggling-secure-boot/
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22 minutes ago, VirusWar said:

Hello, hope you're all well!

I've encountered an issue. I've installed Windows 11 recently and had no issues in all honesty except last night. I wanted to play Valorant and it pooped out an error saying it needs TPM and secure boot enabled to function.

Going in my BIOS I can't find either CSM option or Secure Boot options anywhere. I've got a MSI H61M-P20 (G3) (MS-7788) motherboard, running latest bios v1.9.

In the sysinfo it says:

BIOS Mode    UEFI
Secure Boot State    Unsupported
PCR7 Configuration    Binding Not Possible
Device Encryption Support    Reasons for failed automatic device encryption: TPM is not usable, PCR7 binding is not supported, Hardware Security Test Interface failed and device is not Modern Standby, Un-allowed DMA capable bus/device(s) detected, TPM is not usable

 


Any advices on what I should do and where should I go? Is there any way to spoof the information at least? With Windows 10 I had no issues.

If there is no 'Security Devices' section in your BIOS to allow TPM to be enabled, there is apparently a TPM header on your motherboard, but I am not certain you need it, the CPU should provide the TPM functions through the chipset on 600 series boards (assuming 610 is a 600 series).

Here is the MSI link for supported chipsets https://www.msi.com/blog/How-to-Enable-TPM-on-MSI-Motherboards-Featuring-TPM-2-0

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Looks like that's a 2nd/3rd gen board, so basically you're SOL, too old. Intel CPUs didn't have built-in TPM functionalty back then. 

F@H
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GPD Win 2

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