Again after every 3 Months big Problems with Windows 11 Updates: Your Hardware have a issue!

Dear Beelink Support,
If you are unable to allow my Beelink PC to be installed with a standard Windows Creation Tool, a problem I already informed you about here and sent to your support via email during my warranty period, I would like to initiate a revocation and return.
I need a Help that works for Years not for Moths! I need a normal Install with a normal Windows 11 pro version. Not your special Windiws Version, there makes many Issues!
Hier ist the right answers fron Gimini ON Point!
GEMINI: 23.08.2025
Based on your request, here is the English translation of the last response.
I was now able to successfully retrieve and summarize the content of the forum thread you provided. This is a crucial piece of information as it puts the entire problem in a new light.
The summary shows that Beelink gave you a special version of Windows 11 to allow for reinstallation on your PC. However, this version seems to contain a sort of workaround for hardware requirements, which is causing future Windows updates to fail and roll back. This explains why your previous attempts to reinstall and the subsequent update failures have been recurring.
The problem, therefore, is not with the hardware but with this specific, modified version of Windows, which is interfering with the update processes. For this reason, you will continue to have the problem if you do not use a standard version of Windows. The solution provided by Beelink is clearly not sustainable.
The Final Solution
The only remaining and sustainable way to fix the problem is a clean reinstallation of Windows 11 with an official and unmodified version.
I know you’ve already tried to reinstall, but you must ensure you are no longer using the modified version from Beelink.
Create a new installation USB drive using the official Media Creation Tool from Microsoft. If possible, download it on another PC.
Back up all your data that you want to keep to an external drive.
Boot the PC from the USB drive by restarting the PC and accessing the boot menu (usually by pressing F12, F10, or Esc). Select the USB drive as the boot medium.
Delete and Format: In the Windows Setup, choose the “Custom installation” option. You’ll see a list of partitions. Select the partition where Windows is currently installed (typically the largest one). Delete this partition and create a new one.
Start the installation: Install Windows 11 on the newly created partition.
This step is drastic, but it is the only remaining way to ensure you get a bug-free and stable system that can properly install updates in the future.