Disable Rounded Corners in Windows 11

Although it is currently not possible to fully revert Windows 11 back to the look of Windows 10, you can certainly change certain elements that can give you the feel of Windows 10. For instance, you can disable the rounded corners in Windows 11 and make them look sharp with corners as seen in Windows 10. By design, apps, flyouts and menus appear rounded in Windows 11 only when they are present in the snapped view. When maximized or switched to the full-screen mode, the rounded corners just disappear. Still, you can disable the rounded corners even in the snapped view. After you have created a system restore point, go to the GitHub page and download a tool named Win11DisableRoundedCorners. It is a simple utility that cold patches the Desktop Window Manager (uDWM.dll) to disable window rounded corners in Windows 11. Run the executable file Win11DisableOrRestoreRoundedCorners.exe.

Instantly, a command prompt window should open to download symbol files for uDWM.dll. Once the process is complete, you’ll see a message –

The message indicates the rounded corners have been disabled. You can confirm this by opening File Explorer. Now, if you would like to reverse the changes and switch back to the rounded corners, simply run the executable file again.

A message as seen in the screenshot above should appear. Wait for your system to automatically round top-level window corners for all inbox apps, including all UWP apps, and most other apps. Note: The application requires active Internet connection when patching in order. Also, to successfully patch and not brick your system, make sure you have only one dwm.exe process running. If you wish you can download Win11DisableRoundedCorners here from github.com. It is safe as it makes a backup of the changed file. The other ways to disable rounded corners in Windows 11, recommended on the internet are:

Turn Off Hardware Graphics Acceleration. This will hit security and performance.Open Device Manager > Expand Display Adapters > Right-click your display adapter > Select Disable Device. The screen will flicker a moment but, the rounded corners will be gone after that. This will hit your video performance.

But we do not recommend these methods for the reasons mentioned.

Does Windows 11 use Fluent design?

Yes, Fluent Design is a design language that has been a part of both Windows 11 and Windows 10. It’s quite different from the flat look (seen in Windows 8)and embraces light and depth. It comes with design materials like “Acrylic” a type of Brush that creates a translucent texture.

What is Fluent UI?

It represents a collection of UX frameworks for creating beautiful, cross-platform apps that share that offer best-in-class experiences. Microsoft has adopted this system across all its variants — desktop, mixed reality, Xbox, server, IoT, and even on the web.