Hackbgrt-1.5.1 Page

: This tool does not work on older BIOS (Legacy) systems; it requires UEFI boot mode and a GPT partition table.

Follow the on-screen prompts to install the boot loader. Reboot: Restart your computer to verify the change. Critical Risks and Troubleshooting

HackBGRT 1.5.1 isn't bloatware; it's a power-user tool. It does one thing, and it does it perfectly. It transforms the cold, corporate boot process into something personal. Hackbgrt-1.5.1

It allows you to replace the standard Windows startup logo with a custom image by modifying the on UEFI-based systems. 🛠️ Core Features

Because mistakes can render a system unbootable, always create a full backup of your data and keep a Windows installation USB or recovery drive on hand before proceeding. : This tool does not work on older

HackBGRT - Windows boot logo changer for UEFI systems - GitHub

The custom logo must be in 24-bit BMP or DIB format. Installation Steps (1.5.1) Critical Risks and Troubleshooting HackBGRT 1

Historically, changing a computer's boot logo required dangerous BIOS/UEFI flashing, which carried a massive risk of permanently bricking the motherboard. by acting as an interim EFI bootloader application.

is a powerful, open-source utility designed to change this by allowing you to replace the default UEFI boot screen logo with a custom image. HackBGRT-1.5.1 is a notable release in this project's history, refining the process of modifying the Boot Graphics Resource Table (BGRT) to display your own artwork during startup. What is HackBGRT?

Passing control back to the Windows loader so the system starts normally, but with your logo on screen. Installation Guide

is a specialized, open-source UEFI utility developed by Metabolix that allows users to change the default Windows boot logo. When a computer boots up on a modern Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) system, Windows fetches the vendor-defined logo (such as Dell, HP, Lenovo, or ASUS) from a section in the motherboard's ACPI tables called the Boot Graphics Resource Table (BGRT) . Under normal circumstances, altering this image permanently is difficult and dangerous because it requires flashing the motherboard's BIOS. HackBGRT bypasses this issue entirely. It injects a custom UEFI application into the boot path, temporarily overwriting the BGRT image in the computer's volatile memory every single time the system starts.