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Ameliorated.io’s AME Beta is positioned as “the ultimate tool for modifying Windows.” It is not a typical cleanup utility, but a native application for deep Windows customization. It uses YAML Playbooks to define modification steps, enabling actions such as removing system components, deleting files, editing the registry, deploying software, running scripts, adjusting the interface, and injecting custom OOBE settings into ISO images.
Its core abstraction is the Playbook: users can drag and drop modular YAML instructions to run them, or write their own based on the documentation. The page mentions support for full regex actions, as well as the ability to delete files that are normally locked by system integrity protection while the system is running, with deletion results verified afterward. This suggests a fairly deep level of system access, making it suitable for repeatable and auditable system modification workflows. The application is built with C# and .NET, emphasizing a native, lightweight experience with a Windows 11-style interface.
The project clearly emphasizes open source, stating that most of its software is released under the MIT license and providing a GitHub entry point. On the ecosystem side, the official site lists verified Playbooks such as AtlasOS, ReviOS, Privacy+, and AME 10, lowering the barrier for users who do not want to write configurations from scratch. It also offers scripts and guides for migrating NTLite configurations to Playbooks, making it suitable for users who already have experience customizing Windows images. As for documentation, the page says that all aspects of Playbook creation are documented and easy to understand, with community assistance available. However, the main page does not show concrete documentation examples, so it is only possible to confirm that documentation exists; its quality still needs to be verified in practice.
The page does not show commercial pricing, subscriptions, enterprise editions, or payment methods. Given the open-source positioning and download access, basic usage appears to be primarily free. Support channels include Support, Discord, Telegram, X, and GitHub, but there is no visible mention of SLAs, ticket priority, or commercial support.
Its strengths are powerful capabilities, reusable YAML-based configurations, open-source transparency, existing verified Playbooks, and support for both ISO-based and live-system modification scenarios. The downsides are also clear: it is still in Beta, and it performs high-risk operations such as deleting system files, removing components, and modifying the registry. Misuse by ordinary users could render a system unusable. It is better suited to advanced Windows users, system optimization enthusiasts, image maintainers, and developers willing to write Playbooks. It is not ideal for beginners who only want one-click cleanup without understanding the consequences.
The main text does not provide China-specific access, mirror sites, or payment information, so actual connectivity is unknown. Accessing community channels such as GitHub, Discord, and Telegram may be unstable from mainland China. Alternatives to consider include NTLite, DISM/PowerShell scripts, Chris Titus Tech Windows Utility, or ready-made options such as AtlasOS and ReviOS.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on amelabs.net official site.
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