We used to call it slipsteaming a while back. Im not sure what your on about, Windows has a built in 'refresh' tool to put it back into first buy something state, what is it you mean?
No, lol, I think you're still misunderstanding my question. First, "slipstreaming" has to do installing an OS with all the patches and updates already combined. The OS. This is to keep you have having to wrangle with the auto-updater for a full-bore gazillion byte download every time through, say, windows updater. Nearly everyone remembers Windows XP SP2 slipstreams.....
I'm talking about the installing of various applications, games, etc., automatically. In any case, this is a bit of a dead-horse. It seems like the only truly solid way of doing all of this is to either:
1. Install them by hand (game delivery engines like Steam will automate the downloading, but not the configurations in a safe manner).
or 2. Hand-craft my own powershell script to do this for me (I'm a software engineer, it's not a problem). But at this point, due to the vagaries of each of the apps, I'll have already done more work than #1 above.
Ugh. Basically, the auto-installation routines and configuration shortcuts online are trying to solve a different problem: How IT does a /somewhat/ tailored install across an ocean of PCs, virtual or otherwise. I'm trying to find a way to decrease the pain in multiple reinstalls of all these games on one machine over time.
EVEN IF I have the bulk of the "must-have-OS-only" on a single "special" partition (I do this anyway, it's my NVMe drive, like many people do), and reload the "ghost" image of that partition, then I'm still stuck in all the other reinstalls, because even if they're on another drive entirely,
Windows apps are notoriously picky about their assumptions in the registry.
It's not like Linux where nearly everything is based upon directories. At least there I can mostly just lift & plop everything perfectly into place.
Anyway, thanks everyone!! There is no solution yet for windows.