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- Table of Contents
- 1. 3D in Windows (Paint 3D + Remix 3D)
- 2. Built-in game broadcasting (Beam)
- 3. Game Mode
- 4. A dedicated Gaming section in Settings
- 5. Picture-in-picture (Compact Overlay)
- 6. Night Light
- 7. Dynamic Lock
- 8. Windows Defender Security Center dashboard
- 9. Clearer privacy choices + a new privacy dashboard
- 10. Microsoft Edge tab preview bar
- 11. Microsoft Edge “Set tabs aside”
- 12. E-books + EPUB reading in Edge (via the Store)
- 13. Start menu folders
- 14. High-DPI scaling improvements
- 15. Cortana upgrades (including voice-guided setup)
- Real-World Experiences: What It Feels Like to Use These Features (An Extra )
- Conclusion
The Windows 10 Creators Update (version 1703) landed in 2017 with a simple pitch: make your PC feel more creative, more gamer-friendly, and a little less likely to
reboot at the exact moment you’re about to hit “Submit.” (Windows can be dramatic like that.)
In practice, the update blended splashy “look what we can do” features (hello, 3D) with surprisingly useful quality-of-life upgrades (hello, Night Light and better
update controls). Below are 15 standout featureswhat they do, why you should care, and how they fit into real life.
1. 3D in Windows (Paint 3D + Remix 3D)
The headline feature of the Creators Update was “3D for everyone,” which is Microsoft-speak for: “You don’t need a Hollywood workstation to doodle something with
depth.” Paint 3D brought a modern interface, simple 3D object creation, and easy texturingwithout demanding you learn professional modeling software first.
Why it matters
Even if you never touch a 3D printer, 3D tools are great for quick mockupslike visualizing a desk setup, building a simple logo object, or making a classroom
presentation that looks slightly more “wow” than a flat PNG.
Real example
Take a 2D doodle (say, a rocket), turn it into a simple 3D shape, slap on a metallic texture, and export it for sharing. If you don’t want to start from scratch,
Remix 3D let you pull community-made objects into your project so you could customize instead of reinventing the wheel.
2. Built-in game broadcasting (Beam)
The Creators Update baked live streaming into Windows itself. Hit Windows + G to open the Game Bar, click broadcast, and stream gameplay without
juggling third-party tools. At the time, this was tied to Microsoft’s Beam platform (later known as Mixer).
Why it matters
For casual streamers, setup friction is everything. If streaming feels like assembling IKEA furniture with no instructions, you’ll quit. Built-in broadcasting made
it “one button closer” to effortless.
Pro tip
Even if you never streamed, the same pipeline improved how Windows handled game overlaysmeaning fewer weird interruptions when you just want a screenshot or clip.
3. Game Mode
Game Mode was designed to prioritize CPU/GPU resources for your game and reduce background activity. The goal wasn’t magic FPS doublingit was consistency:
fewer stutters, fewer “why is my laptop suddenly melting?” moments, especially on mid-range systems.
Why it matters
On a high-end desktop, you might shrug. On a laptop running a game plus a browser with 37 tabs, Discord, and a “totally necessary” update in the background?
Game Mode could be the difference between playable and painful.
Specific scenario
If you’re gaming while recording a clip, Game Mode tries to keep the game responsive rather than letting background tasks steal the spotlight.
4. A dedicated Gaming section in Settings
The Creators Update gave gaming first-class status in Settings with a dedicated Gaming section. Instead of hunting across menus, you could manage
Game Bar, Game DVR, broadcasting, and Game Mode in one place.
Why it matters
Windows has always had a talent for hiding important toggles behind five layers of menus like it’s guarding a secret family recipe. Centralizing gaming settings
reduced that “where did they put it?” frustration.
Best use
If you’ve ever accidentally turned on background recording and wondered why your disk space disappeared like snacks during a movie, this menu helped you fix it fast.
5. Picture-in-picture (Compact Overlay)
The update introduced picture-in-picture style behavior for certain Universal Windows appsletting a video (or a call) stay on top while you work in other windows.
It’s the “I’m multitasking, I swear” feature for watching something while still pretending to be productive.
Why it matters
It’s genuinely useful for tutorials: keep a small video visible while you follow steps in a different window, without constantly alt-tabbing like you’re playing
keyboard whack-a-mole.
6. Night Light
Night Light built a blue-light reduction mode directly into Windowssimilar in spirit to tools like f.luxso you could warm the screen in the evening and reduce
that “my eyes feel like they’ve been to a laser show” vibe.
Why it matters
Whether you’re studying late, gaming at night, or just doom-scrolling before bed, Night Light is the simplest “tiny comfort” upgrade. It’s not a cure for
staying up too late… but it’s a nicer way to do it.
How you’d use it
Set a schedule (sunset-to-sunrise or custom times) and adjust warmth until it feels naturalnot like you dipped your monitor in orange juice.
7. Dynamic Lock
Dynamic Lock is basically “Windows Goodbye.” Pair your phone (or another Bluetooth device), and Windows can automatically lock your PC when you walk away
and the connection drops.
Why it matters
If you work in shared spacesor you’ve ever left your computer unlocked and come back to a mysterious new desktop wallpaperDynamic Lock adds a layer of
protection without requiring you to remember Win + L every time.
Real-world note
Bluetooth range varies, so it’s more “helpful guardrail” than “perfect security robot.” Still, it’s a smart default for everyday privacy.
8. Windows Defender Security Center dashboard
Security got a big UI glow-up with the Windows Defender Security Center dashboard. Instead of bouncing between separate windows, you could see antivirus,
firewall, device health, and browser/app controls from one centralized place.
Why it matters
Most people don’t wake up excited to check their firewall status. A single dashboard makes it more likely you’ll actually notice problemslike protections being
turned offor at least understand what’s running.
Bonus: behind-the-scenes hardening
Microsoft also talked about deeper platform defenses in this era (especially around exploit mitigation). Even when those features aren’t flashy, they’re the
unglamorous reason your PC stays boringin the best possible way.
9. Clearer privacy choices + a new privacy dashboard
Privacy was a major talking point around Windows 10, and the Creators Update responded with clearer setup prompts and a simplified approach to diagnostic data
levels. The goal: more transparency, fewer “Wait… what did I just agree to?” moments during setup.
Why it matters
Whether you’re privacy-conscious or just tired of settings feeling like a scavenger hunt, Windows pushed more privacy decisions upfront. It also introduced a
Microsoft privacy dashboard concept for viewing and managing certain activity data across services.
Practical takeaway
The best privacy feature is the one you can actually findand the Creators Update made privacy controls easier to discover and understand.
10. Microsoft Edge tab preview bar
Edge gained a tab preview bar that shows visual thumbnails of open tabs. If you’re the type of person who opens ten tabs “for later,” then forgets what any of
them are, previews make it quicker to find the right one.
Why it matters
Tab overload is modern life. Previews help you move from “which tab is my homework?” to “oh, it’s the one with the chart” without clicking five times.
11. Microsoft Edge “Set tabs aside”
“Set tabs aside” is exactly what it sounds like: stash your current tab session and come back later. It’s like cleaning your room by shoving everything into
one closetexcept in this case, it’s actually useful.
Why it matters
It’s great for context switching. Researching a project? Set those tabs aside. Ready to do something else? Open a clean slate. When you return, restore the whole
session without trying to remember what you were doing three hours (and two snacks) ago.
12. E-books + EPUB reading in Edge (via the Store)
The Creators Update added an e-book section to the Windows Store and made Edge the reading app, supporting EPUB files and a “Books” experience with adjustable
fonts, themes, bookmarks, and reading tools like Read Aloud.
Why it matters
If you already lived in your browser, reading there reduced app switching. It also added accessibility-friendly touches like read-aloud and spacing options,
which can make reading easier for a wider range of people.
Real example
Download an EPUB of a public-domain classic, tweak the theme to a comfortable background, and let Read Aloud handle a chapter while you take noteslike an
audiobook-lite workflow without extra software.
13. Start menu folders
Start menu folders let you drag tiles on top of each other to create tidy groupssimilar to folder behavior on mobile. Click a folder tile and it expands into
the apps inside.
Why it matters
This is one of those “small” features that makes daily life calmer. A Start menu that isn’t a chaotic wall of tiles is easier to scan, faster to use, and less
likely to trigger an urge to delete everything and start over.
Best use
Make folders like School, Games, Art, Utilities. Your future self will thank you.
14. High-DPI scaling improvements
As high-resolution displays became more common, Windows had to get better at scaling apps cleanly. The Creators Update improved high-DPI scaling behavior and
refined display settings so text and UI elements were less likely to look tiny, blurry, or oddly proportioned on sharp screens.
Why it matters
If you use a 4K monitor or a high-DPI laptop, good scaling can be the difference between “this looks crisp” and “why is this menu using ant-sized fonts?”
It’s a quality-of-life upgrade you notice every day because your eyes are involved in… everything.
Practical payoff
Better scaling also helps when you dock/undock or move windows across monitors with different resolutionsone of the quickest ways to discover UI weirdness.
15. Cortana upgrades (including voice-guided setup)
The Creators Update expanded Cortana in a few ways, including a more guided setup experience on clean installs (yes, Cortana can talk you through setup) and
additional features aimed at helping you continue tasks across devices.
Why it matters
When setup is smoother, you spend less time clicking through menus and more time actually using your PC. And if you bounce between devices, Cortana’s “pick up
where you left off” style prompts were an early attempt at making Windows feel more connected.
Reality check
Voice setup is neatespecially hands-freebut it’s optional. If you’re not in the mood for a chatty computer, keyboard and mouse still work just fine.
Real-World Experiences: What It Feels Like to Use These Features (An Extra )
Here’s the honest “daily life” version of the Creators Update: most people didn’t install it and immediately start building 3D masterpieces. The first thing you
notice is usually the boring stuffbecause boring is what touches your routine. For example, Night Light becomes the feature you turn on once “just to see,” then
quietly rely on every evening. After a week, you stop thinking about it entirely… until you sit at a different PC and wonder why the screen feels like a spotlight
aimed directly at your eyeballs.
Gamers tend to have a similar experience with Game Mode and the new gaming settings hub. You don’t always see dramatic performance gains, but you do notice fewer
annoying interruptions. It’s the difference between “my game stuttered exactly when I turned the corner” and “okay, that felt smoother.” And the Settings hub is
the kind of organizational win that only matters when something breakslike when the Game Bar is popping up at the wrong time or background recording is chewing
through storage. Then it matters a lot, very quickly.
Dynamic Lock is the most “I didn’t know I needed this” feature. The first time it locks your PC automatically, it feels a bit like your computer is being polite:
“You stepped away. I got you.” The second time, you start trusting itjust enough to stop worrying when you go refill your water or walk across the room. It’s not
perfect (Bluetooth can be moody), but it’s a helpful safety net, especially in shared spaces like classrooms, libraries, or busy homes.
Edge’s tab tools are the sneaky productivity upgrade. Tab preview and “set tabs aside” sound minor until you’re doing research and your browser turns into a
chaotic pile of open pages. Setting tabs aside feels like hitting pause on your brain: you can switch tasks without losing your place. It’s also one of the few
“browser features” that helps both students and professionals because everyone does the same thing: opens too much, forgets why, and then pretends it was all part
of the plan.
And yes, Paint 3D was funespecially in that “I’ll play with this for 20 minutes and then go back to my life” way. People used it to make quick 3D text, simple
stickers, and goofy objects they could share. The bigger point wasn’t that everyone became a 3D artist overnight; it’s that Windows tried to make creativity feel
approachable instead of intimidating. Even if your greatest creation was a slightly lopsided 3D donut, you still got a taste of making somethingwithout needing
a tutorial series longer than a TV season.