However, if you just want a simple “plug-and-play” USB drive, Ventoy is simpler. And if you only boot Linux ISOs, GRUB’s built-in loopback is sufficient.
If you already manage a GRUB-based multiboot environment, adding NTBoot7z is a no-brainer. It gives you the superpower of booting any Windows ISO or WIM on demand, with almost zero setup overhead.
title Boot Windows 10 ISO with NTBoot7z ntboot7z iso=/boot/win10.iso boot UEFI is more complex because it requires a working ntboot7z.efi and proper Secure Boot handling (you may need to disable Secure Boot or sign the EFI).
But for the niche of , nothing beats NTBoot7z. It’s lightweight (< 1 MB), lightning fast when paired with an SSD, and incredibly satisfying to use.
ntboot7z wim=/sources/boot.wim index=1 The index parameter selects which image inside the WIM (e.g., 1 for Windows PE, 2 for Windows Setup). If you have windows.7z containing an ISO inside, you can do:
is a specialized utility designed to boot Windows operating systems directly from compressed disk image files—specifically ISO (disc image) and WIM (Windows Imaging Format) files—without needing to extract them to a USB drive or hard disk partition. It is an evolution of the legacy ntboot tool, enhanced with native support for 7-Zip’s progressive extraction technology.
Combine NTBoot7z with grub-rescue on a hidden partition. Then, even if your main OS dies, you can boot recovery ISOs directly from your hard drive without scrambling for a USB stick. That is the true power of NTBoot7z. Have you used NTBoot7z in a unique way? Share your experiences in the community forums. And always keep a backup of your bootloader configuration before experimenting!