Microsoft has begun a broader rollout of new features for Windows 11, many of which have been quietly tested for months within the Windows Insider Program. With this latest update—arriving gradually over the coming weeks—Windows 11 users, especially those with Copilot+ PCs, can expect a more integrated AI experience, subtle UI changes, and a few new tools that focus on usability and content creation.
One notable upgrade is a new natural language agent built directly into the Settings app. Instead of navigating endless menus, you can now type commands like “Enable quiet hours” or “Change resolution to 1920×1080,” and the system will offer to execute those changes directly. While not revolutionary, it makes system-level adjustments more accessible for casual users.
Another addition is Click To Do, a contextual tool that activates when you select text or images. This includes features like Practice in Reading Coach, which provides feedback on reading fluency and pronunciation, and an Immersive Reader mode that strips distractions from content while adding custom fonts and text-to-speech functionality. In Microsoft Word, selected text can now be passed directly to Copilot to draft full documents—a feature clearly designed for those working within Office 365.
Visual editing also gets a boost. The Photos app now includes a Relight feature, which lets you add up to three virtual light sources to fine-tune lighting in your images. It’s essentially a lightweight post-processing tool for those without access to pro-level photo software. Over in Paint, users will find a new AI-powered object select tool and a sticker generator that creates custom graphics from simple text prompts. While these additions won’t rival Photoshop, they do add more flexibility to Windows’ built-in creative tools.
Snipping Tool, often one of the most-used apps for quick screenshots, gains a color picker for grabbing hex codes from anywhere on screen. On Copilot+ machines, it also introduces a perfect screenshot tool that automatically aligns your selection to the content you’re trying to capture—removing the need for tedious cropping.
Another major addition—though opt-in only—is Copilot Vision on Windows. This feature allows Microsoft’s AI assistant to “see” your screen and offer contextual help based on what’s visible. It can answer questions about open windows, guide you through app usage, and generally act as a visual companion for basic workflows. For privacy-conscious users, the opt-in nature is a welcome detail.
Gamers also get a small quality-of-life feature: Edge Game Assist, which integrates Discord, Spotify, and walkthroughs into the Windows Game Bar. It’s unlikely to replace dedicated in-game overlays, but it’s a convenience tool for lighter users who already rely on Edge.
Beyond features, Microsoft is quietly improving background systems too. A new Quick Machine Recovery feature enhances the existing Windows Recovery Environment, automatically diagnosing and repairing issues after an unexpected shutdown—without requiring user intervention.
Altogether, the Windows 11 July 2025 update brings AI deeper into everyday tasks, though many of the more advanced features remain locked to newer Copilot+ PCs. For regular users, the improvements in Settings navigation, screenshot tools, and image editing may be the most immediately useful.
Expect the features to land over the next few days or weeks, depending on your update cadence. While some additions are modest, they reflect Microsoft’s continued shift toward AI-assisted computing and integrated toolsets that reduce the need for third-party apps.