Quote Originally Posted by MateoTTR View Post
I see what you mean.
Still based on % of corrupted files vs % of files actually vital to the system, the probability that I should encounter crashes is quite high in my opinion.

I would really like sfc to log what files are corrupt so that I can actually check them by myself.
SFC overwrites the files found corrupted from your windows disc.
Even with a log, you wouldn't be able to do a thing since...the files will be replaced during the sfc run.
And of course, you can't install windows again and check the files logged by SFC because simply can't corrupt the same files, it's a random and tied to what you're doing and which files are being accessed when the corruption occurs.