BroMoe, Mohammed! There's a move I made a few years back, which during that time really helped me. Now this method is not for everyone, because a) it involves talking about your addiction with a friend/family. and b) you'd give up some of your authority. So it's not a permanent solution but it helped me during the first few weeks: Reduce your own windows account to a non-administrator status and ask a good friend or a family member to set an admin password on your desktop. Doing this has some benefits: 0. You cannot install games by yourself. You have to ask for the admin password. 1. You "automatically" gain a partner to talk about your addiction. 2. Your computer will still be available for any other non-gaming activity you'd like to perform. 3. Hacking your way back into your computer as an admin is certainly possible but you'll think twice, maybe three times, before going through all that effort before sabotaging yourself. The downside is that you might argue that you're not achieving sobriety autonomously... but who cares!?! We're here in this community because we don't want to be alone, right?As long as you achieve your goals (within ethical boundries ofcourse! #winkyface @sjoti) How would you achieve this? 1 enable the admin account http://www.isunshare.com/windows-10/3-ways-to-enable-and-disable-built-in-administrator-in-windows-10.html 2 login as admin and let someone else set a password for this account 3 as admin, go to uac and remove your own admin rights. advice is always free and there's no strings attached. Do with it whatever you like ;-) Kind Regards, Chris