Why this exists

Diagnostics should show the important clues, not bury users in noise.

Lurionyx SysDiag is being created because Windows diagnostics are powerful, but the information is spread across too many places. The goal is a calmer workspace that helps users understand what matters and what to do next.

The problem

Windows has the clues, but they are scattered.

Event Viewer, Device Manager, Services, Windows Update, crash dumps, repair commands, disk tools, reliability history, and hardware monitors all have useful information. The hard part is knowing which tool to open, which result matters, and which repeated warning is just noise.

Less guessing

The app is meant to reduce the jump between tools and make the next step easier to see.

Rayen's reason

Built from hands-on experience with PC builds, configs, and real diagnostics.

After building computers, setting up different configurations, and diagnosing systems, the same problem kept appearing: the useful information exists, but finding it often takes too much switching, searching, and filtering.

01

Only the useful signals first

Show the information that helps explain the current state of the system, without forcing users through unrelated details.

02

One place instead of many tools

Bring hardware, logs, storage, services, updates, crash clues, and repair paths into one connected workspace.

03

Actions with context

Make common repair commands and system actions easier to reach, while explaining what they do before the user runs them.

Design direction

From scattered data to a guided diagnosis.

1

Collect

Gather important Windows, hardware, update, storage, and event signals locally.

2

Reduce noise

Group repeated errors and focus attention on the clues that are most likely to matter.

3

Explain

Translate technical results into plain-language guidance so users know why something matters.

4

Act carefully

Offer repair paths, commands, and actions with risk explanations instead of blind one-click fixing.

The goal

Make Windows troubleshooting feel centralized, readable, and easier to act on.