I recently built both a 5600X and a 5600g system using ASUS B450M Pro-S motherboards updated to the latest 3802 BIOS. It's a great motherboard, by the way. I've used optimized defaults in BIOS, but implemented standard DOCP overclocking on both in BIOS. The 5600X system is Windows 11 ready, but the 5600G system is not. I do not know why. I've fiddled with BIOS settings, but nothing I've done changes the result. The 5600X system has a GTX1660 Super installed, while the 5600G system is using the integrated graphics from the CPU. I don't know if this somehow would make a difference. Both systems boot on a Samsung NVME m.2 drive (1 terabyte 970 EVO+ for the 5700X and 500 MByte 970 for the 5600G), and have 16 GBytes DDR4 3600 Corsair Vengeance RAM. I would appreciate advice regarding this problem, but I actually don't intend to update to Windows 11 anytime soon. I am very happy with the Windows 10 OS which also is installed on the other 11 AMD systems I've built and continue to use beginning in 2017 and progressing through four generations on the AM4 platform. I've built dozens of Intel computers over dozens of years, but have been an AMD user ever since I bought both a 1700 and 2200G on the first day of availability at Micro Center. All of my Ryzen systems work flawlessly, even the old 2200G with it's moderate overclock. What incredible value! I even bought AMD stock after building my first half-dozen AMD systems. Using AMD is believing in AMD, even though I continue to use an old Intel i7-7700K system almost every day--my final Intel upgrade. My 3300X system outperforms the 7700K, by the way. Amazing for a $120 processor!