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  • Try use the PC's "Restore system" option, to restore it to a "Save" from the past. Though I'm not really sure what (in the world) made you move everything you got to a Temporary folder (there comes TEMP). But I'm not really sure how you cleaned everything there, since shutting down the PC doesn't empty that folder for me. Maybe CCleaner or similar software ? In any case, don't worry about the loss, you got everything important in your mind That's the most important thing, while you got that, yo…
  • Well, even if it's by a Virus that ruined your HDD, or that the HDD died out for being old/hit/overheated, or that you simply smashed the PC into the wall (lol), or some mistake which made you lose the data, or the Windows itself, it has pretty much the same effect on people, and it happened to everyone who has any kind of PC. But being sad won't help with it, and being angry, maybe can help, if you use that anger to rebuild everything even faster... good And your loss is pretty small (compared…
  • And that's the problem with Recovery tools that are not within Windows. They don't always work, at least not for such big quantities of stuff/data. Also, as you said, it recovers normal type of things, as in, videos, images, text and compressed stuff. Where the Crossfire (and any other game I think) are not within those 4 types, as they have .DAT files, .DLL ones, executables, and so on. But I guess you did got some stuff back like the school stuff, right ? Then that's already better than it wa…
  • So, all works now ? And ya, lucky you DID have a Restore Point, and that they are normally made before you install something, and at some periods of time (which you chose).
  • Twice a week, that's too often, waste of a LOT of HDD space and also, if you encounter problems that started with something you did like, a month ago, you will need older restore points to fix it, and you won't find any Unless you increased the max ammount of HDD the restore points can occupy... up to 10 %.
  • That'd work, and ofc in the moment before installing something vital on the PC, or important (in most cases it's automatic, when it's about Windows).
  • Of course, you just have to leave/have some free space left on the HDD when you install the 1rst OS. If you already made a partition (where if you didn't do any, it automatically takes all the HDD), then you'll have to uninstall that, then create the partitions, split into 2, 3 parts of the size you want, then installing each OS in each partition in the same way you install it with no partitions. Instead of selecting the empty space, you select a partition.