How We Test
Our approach to safe tech help
NexyFix reviews troubleshooting advice by asking whether it matches real symptoms, starts with reversible checks, explains risk clearly, and avoids steps that could make a device or data loss problem worse.
Symptom-first checks
Guides are organized around real symptoms readers describe: a PC will not boot, Windows Update is stuck, a drive is missing during setup, audio disappears, Bluetooth fails, a game crashes, or a phone will not charge. Each guide should separate quick checks from advanced fixes.
Built-in tools first
Where possible, troubleshooting starts with built-in settings, official support paths, safe restarts, Device Manager, Windows recovery options, platform settings, and manufacturer driver pages before third-party tools.
Commands are explained
When a command is useful, the guide explains what it does before showing it. NexyFix does not run commands for readers, does not include destructive disk commands, and avoids registry hacks and miracle repair scripts.
Risky fixes are avoided
Firmware, storage, partition, reset, reinstall, power, battery, and hardware topics include stop points. We avoid casual BIOS changes, fake driver updater tools, opening power supplies, and unsafe phone or laptop repair advice.
Gaming optimization checks
Performance advice should separate practical settings from folklore. Recommendations should consider stability, thermals, driver changes, background apps, overlays, frame pacing, and realistic hardware limits.
No fake lab claims
NexyFix does not claim a certification program, repair lab, or specialized test equipment that it does not have. When a page is based on structured editorial review rather than hands-on hardware testing, the wording should stay clear about that.