

PS: Yeah, I do love the damn Win 7 boot screen. I thought of doing a clean windows installation and start all over because of this. Yes, Windows allows OEMs to change the login wallpaper and it is easily done with a registry hack and placement of the correct files. I hope this might help somenone else with the same problem as myself. Don’t have to register them just copy/paste. Windows 2000, Windows XP, Vista, and 7 BSoDs use the 640×480 screen resolution. BSoDs in the Windows NT family initially used the 80×50 text mode on a 720×400 screen. I also took it from my other Win 7 drive. Videos of the boot screen on Windows 1.01 filled with random characters due to an incorrect DOS version. I also have two other files missing in C:\WINDOWS\System32\en-US.

It sent me an error, but it made it work, so what the hell! It worked! Finally! In the CMD window, run commands as follows to partition and format the USB drive. Press 'Windows' + 'R', input 'cmd' to and click 'OK'. What I was missing was to register the dll (Run > regsvr32 bootres.dll). Connect an empty USB drive whose capacity should be larger than 4GB for Windows 7 (8GB for Windows 11, 10, and 8.1). So I took it and copied to my current boot drive. Mine was missing, and fortunately I have another drive with Win 7. The causes can be multiple ones: a video adapter issue, some recent driver. I actually tried a lot of things, so it might had something to do with the final result, but what fix it for me was to restore bootres.dll in C:\Windows\System32 folder. Windows 7 can display a complete, blank black screen when you boot your computer. Well, I did try those commands and they didn’t fix it.įor those that cannot get it fixed with the bcdedit and bcdboot commands and neither the startup repair just like me, I may have a solution.
