“Yes!” he whispered.
Windows logo. Spinning dots. Login screen. install easybcd
Arjun was a tinkerer. Not the kind who built robots from scrap, but the kind who dual-booted Linux “just to see if it would work.” It was December 23rd, and his younger sister had a school project due in two days. The project files? Trapped on the Linux partition. The presentation software? Only worked on Windows. “Yes
His sister peeked in. “Did you break the computer again ?” Login screen
The progress bar filled. A green checkmark appeared.
His sister finished her project with hours to spare. She never knew about the bootloader, the missing MBR, or the panic. She just knew her brother was a wizard.
Three hours later, after frantically Googling on his phone while staring at a blinking cursor, he found a forum post from 2012. The user had the exact same problem. The solution? “Install EasyBCD. It rewrites the Windows bootloader without a recovery disk.” EasyBCD. A small, free tool that ran inside Windows. But he couldn’t boot into Windows. Classic chicken-and-egg.