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Microsoft is speeding up the right-click action and Quick Settings, and it’s about time

A long overdue performance boost is coming to Windows 11, targeting the menus you use every day.

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Windows 11 users may finally get relief from one of its most annoying slowdowns. According to Windows Latest, Microsoft is reworking Quick Settings and the right-click menu so they respond immediately, two features you likely use dozens of times a day.

Right now, both can lag enough to feel unreliable. Tap Wi-Fi or sound and the panel may take a few seconds to appear, with some toggles updating later.

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Microsoft says it’s testing changes to remove that lag as part of a broader effort to improve responsiveness across Windows 11. The same work also targets the right-click menu, which will open more quickly in File Explorer and elsewhere, addressing another long-running complaint.

Why Quick Settings felt broken

In testing, Quick Settings can stall when switching Wi-Fi networks or toggling Bluetooth, sometimes taking seconds to reflect changes on screen. This means there’s a momentary gap between action and feedback whcih makes the system feel out of sync.

The goal is to remove wait time in Quick Settings, including buttons and deeper pages. Microsoft is also adding small usability upgrades. You’ll be able to rearrange tiles with drag and drop, and a new Energy Saver section groups controls like dark mode, brightness tweaks, and power settings in one place.

It’s part of a bigger cleanup

This change sits within a wider effort to improve how Windows 11 responds across the interface. Microsoft is working toward core UI elements that react without delay, including the Start menu, taskbar, and notifications.

The notifications center is also being tuned to show alerts faster and clear them more quickly, while reducing interruptions from updates and other prompts. Instead of fixing one pain point at a time, Microsoft is raising the baseline across multiple touchpoints.

What to expect next

These improvements aren’t arriving overnight. Microsoft has outlined Windows 11 updates rolling out through 2026, with changes like this tied to larger releases. That suggests deeper system work rather than quick patches, which could lead to more consistent gains once they arrive.

Microsoft is also updating the Settings app to make it cleaner and reduce reliance on the older Control Panel, though some advanced options still route you there.

If small delays in everyday actions have been slowing you down, especially when right-clicking or toggling settings, this is one update worth watching closely.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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