Hackbgrt-1.5.1 !free!
HackBGRT 1.5.1 is an essential tool for enthusiasts looking to customize every aspect of their machine. It offers a relatively safe and effective way to change the Windows boot screen.
You can customize the result further:
Tired of seeing the same Windows logo every time you boot up? HackBGRT 1.5.1 Hackbgrt-1.5.1
HackBGRT-1.5.1 works by inserting a lightweight EFI application into your system's boot sequence. Your image (in 24-bit BMP format) is saved to the EFI System Partition (ESP). Then, the boot process is slightly redirected: when your computer starts, HackBGRT runs first, quickly displays your custom image, and then hands control back to the normal Windows boot loader. This clever technique allows for customization without permanently modifying the UEFI firmware, making the process safer and reversible.
The BMP format might be incompatible. Ensure it is uncompressed, 24-bit BMP. Also, verify the file path in config.plist . HackBGRT 1
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.
Users who dual-boot macOS and Windows can set a unified boot logo – for example, a neutral "Computer" symbol or a custom brand logo – so both OSes show the same clean boot screen. Under normal circumstances
Further reading
: Supports quiet or batch commands for advanced users who want to automate the installation or uninstallation process. How HackBGRT-1.5.1 Works
When a modern computer boots, the motherboard firmware looks at a dedicated ACPI table known as the . This table contains the location and parameters of the manufacturer's logo (e.g., Dell, ASUS, HP, or Lenovo) or the default Windows flag.