X86 Bliss Os Install — Android

Use this if you want a pure Android machine.

  • Write changes, then quit cfdisk.
  • Select the large partition (e.g., sda2) for installation.
  • Choose "Ext4" as the filesystem.
  • When asked to install GRUB bootloader, say Yes.
  • Say Yes to installing /system as read-write (allows system modifications later).
  • Reboot. Remove the USB. Bliss OS will boot.
  • The installer will ask where to put Bliss OS.

    Once installed, open a terminal (download Termux or use Alt+F1) and run: android x86 bliss os install

    # Enable root access (if you installed with RW system)
    su
    
    
  • Select “Yes” to format /data and /system.
  • 📌 For UEFI systems: You’ll also see an EFI partition. Do not touch it – Bliss will add its boot entry there automatically.

    Unlike Windows 11, Bliss OS is lightweight. Here is what you need: Use this if you want a pure Android machine

    | Component | Minimum | Recommended | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | CPU | Intel Core 2 Duo (64-bit) | Intel Core i3 or AMD Ryzen 3 (or newer) | | RAM | 2 GB | 4 GB or more | | Storage | 8 GB free space | 16 GB+ (SSD preferred) | | GPU | Intel Integrated (GMA 4500+) | Intel HD Graphics 4000+ / NVIDIA / AMD | | Firmware | Legacy BIOS or UEFI | UEFI with Secure Boot disabled | | USB Drive | 4 GB (for installer) | 8 GB USB 3.0 |

    Note: Bliss OS runs best on Intel hardware. While AMD works, you may encounter graphics glitches on very old AMD APUs. Write changes, then quit cfdisk

    This is the most requested setup. We will shrink Windows to create free space.

    Troubleshooting Dual-Boot: If Windows boots directly, use EasyBCD (Windows) or boot into your BIOS and manually add the Bliss OS entry under EFI/boot/grubx64.efi.