The installer is a makeshift script that extracts 80MB of chaos into your C:\ drive. It takes 45 seconds. You feel proud. Then, it asks for a 25-character product key. You enter 11111-11111-11111-11111-11111 . It accepts it. Red flag number one.
You right-click the desktop to personalize it. A dialog box appears: “The Desktop Window Manager has stopped working. Also, we deleted your wallpaper. Also, you have 12 seconds to reboot.”
The boot screen is a 64x64 pixel bitmap of the Windows flag, stretched to 1080p. It looks like a moldy green pillow. You hear the iconic Vista startup chime, but it is sampled at 8-bit, 11kHz. It sounds like a dying modem gargling glass. Windows Vista Ultimate 32-bit-only 80 MB- Super Compressed-
After uninstalling, check your hosts file. It redirects Google to Bing.com . That’s the real virus.
You double-click the file named VISTA_ULTIMATE_FINAL_(NO_VIRUS)_v3.exe . Your antivirus immediately has a seizure. After disabling Windows Defender, you run it. The installer is a makeshift script that extracts
Welcome to “Aero” (affectionately renamed Aero-Potato ). There is no transparency. There are no shadows. The taskbar is solid grey. When you hover over the Start button, the computer makes a physical click from the speaker.
“Remember Windows Vista? Remember how bloated and slow it was? What if we removed 99% of the files, crushed the remaining 1% with a hydraulic press, and told you to run it on a Pentium 4?” Then, it asks for a 25-character product key
Windows Vista Ultimate 32-bit Version: “Super Compressed” (80 MB) Reviewer: A very tired system administrator Rating: ⭐ (One star, and that star is on fire)