TPM 2.0 hardware in consumer-level motherboards and prebuilt PCs is much less common. Its deployment is rather common for corporate and business fleet laptops or desktops. It is designed to offer hardware-level protection for encryption keys, credentials, and other important data. The Trusted Platform Module is a chip that can be integrated into systems or added in later via modules. After knowledge of the TPM 2.0 requirement became widespread, online retail supply of the modules instantly dried up with scalpers angling to cash in on the shortage. Because many consumer and gamer-centric motherboards do not include this module by default, add-in modules would be required for the operating system upgrade. For full compatibility with Windows 11 upgrades, user machines will need Trust Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 hardware installed. Among all the fanfare surrounding Microsoft’s unveiling of Windows 11 to the general public, a note provided in the official system requirements for the new operating system piqued the interest of enthusiast PC users and gamers.
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