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@Technogeezer, I beg to differ on a few points. Microsoft sold me two copies of Windows 11 (one for Intel Mac, and one for M-1 Mac. So Microsoft most certainly got paid - and at the handsome retail price (not the discounted price machine manufacturers pay). So you are flat out incorrect on that point. Running many, many months without Fusion "supporting" it just means one thing: one can easily and reliably run this configuration. And we are mincing words again to say Fusion is not "supporting" Windows 11 - all that means is you are on your own if/when it breaks. But if you think "support" means, as I do - does it actually work? The answer is yes, and proven over many, many months. I do agree this is not for corporate America - they need to run supported software, period. But for all the rest who don't have to answer to an IT department and are willing to take an extremely small risk - go for it! I think where we disagree is over the meaning of the word "support." Some in the community think that means - Fusion will help you if it breaks. I get that and that definition is probably the most accurate. But I take the word "support" in this situation to mean - does it work.