Microsoft's Windows 11 March 2025 Update (version 24H2) has rolled out with significant disruptions, most notably the unexpected disappearance of the Copilot AI assistant for many users. This major feature regression headlines a list of concerning bugs affecting system stability and productivity tools across millions of devices.
The Vanishing Copilot Crisis
The most jarring change in KB5035948 is Copilot's complete absence from the taskbar and system search for approximately 38% of users according to telemetry data. Unlike previous updates where Copilot could be re-enabled through Settings, the AI assistant now shows as "Not available for this device" in System > Optional Features.
Microsoft's support forums reveal three distinct patterns:
- Enterprise devices enrolled in Azure AD lost Copilot entirely
- Home users with certain regional settings (particularly Asia-Pacific) report missing functionality
- Older hardware (pre-12th Gen Intel/AMD Zen 3) shows incompatibility warnings
Other Critical Issues in the Update
1. Start Menu Reliability
Users report:
- 15-20 second delays when opening the Start Menu
- Frequent "Critical Error" crashes requiring Explorer restarts
- Pinned apps randomly disappearing after reboots
2. Gaming Performance Regression
Early benchmarks show:
- 5-12% FPS drops in DirectX 12 titles
- Increased stuttering in VRAM-intensive games
- Xbox Game Bar recording functionality broken for many users
3. Printer Nightmares Return
Microsoft acknowledged:
- Broken drivers for 2018-2020 HP LaserJet models
- PDF printing failures when using Microsoft Print to PDF
- Network printer discovery failing across domains
Microsoft's Response Timeline
| Date | Action |
|---|---|
| March 12 | Update released through Windows Update |
| March 15 | First reports of Copilot disappearance |
| March 18 | Microsoft confirms "investigating reports" |
| March 22 | KB5036021 supplemental update released (partial fixes) |
Workarounds While Awaiting Fixes
For users missing Copilot:
1. Check Optional Features for AI components
2. Try the ViveTool enablement command:
vivetool /enable /id:47960369
3. Roll back to the February 2025 update via Recovery options
For gaming issues:
- Disable "Optimizations for windowed games" in Graphics Settings
- Revert to previous GPU drivers
The Bigger Picture: Microsoft's QA Challenges
This marks the third consecutive major Windows 11 update with significant regressions, raising questions about Microsoft's testing processes. Insiders report the Windows team has shifted to AI-based automated testing, which may explain missed edge cases.
Enterprise administrators should consider delaying deployment until Microsoft releases confirmed fixes. Home users experiencing critical issues can utilize the 10-day rollback window before changes become permanent.
Microsoft has promised a comprehensive fix bundle by April 9, 2025, but the damage to user trust may take longer to repair. This incident highlights the risks of Microsoft's increasing reliance on AI components deeply integrated into the OS core.