Your problem seems to rely in how your system stores the certs in fact. I've known for a fact that certs are stored in a non volatile chip, that way if the battery dies, you still can boot your OS without having Secure Boot violations.@garlin
@DarkShadowMD
@Asus272
@t2s50
I'm not an expert in this field but it seems that the Update powershell script doesn't reflash the BIOS — it writes to UEFI authenticated variables (KEK/DB/DBX) that live in a small NVRAM partition inside the SPI flash chip, separate from the main firmware volume.
That write is what CMOS-battery-pull and the CLR_CMOS jumper can't touch — those only reset the CMOS settings block (boot order, dates, fan curves), not the Secure Boot variable store.
The firmware's own sanity-check on boot sees a malformed Secure Boot variable and halts very early — before it even gets to POST code that would normally trigger video output or the recovery-USB key combo detection.
The BIOS Recovery via USB feature depends on a small recovery boot-block actually executing to detect and read the USB stick — if that path itself is gated behind the corrupted variable store (or if the initial POST hangs before reaching it), the recovery flow never triggers, even though you've formatted the stick and named the file correctly.
This is different from a normal "bad BIOS update" brick, where the recovery boot-block is generally safe because it's stored in a protected/write-locked region.
A raw NVRAM corruption from a botched variable write can sit outside that protected region and just wedge everything before recovery logic runs.
The corruption is inside the flash chip's variable store, not the settings CMOS keeps.
Your GPU is less likely to be corrupted, because VBIOS is a firmware like BIOS, and you can't modify it if you don't use specialized tools, and a fresh copy of a firmware for that card. iGPUs don't really have this and rely on a very basic instruction set, they lack a firmware per say (I think), instead you update your CPU microcode, which may include updates for the iGPU... I might be wrong because there are systems with iGPUs that aren't exactly embeeded in the CPU chip (They are in the MoBo) and they could have firmware updates... still unoikely because a BIOS flash would include something for that as well...
Looks like somewhat, the chip where the certs are stored just went nuts or currupted during the update and caused this issue. There are some reprogramming interfaces that might help you recover the system if you cant use a recovery flash method...
Don't your system allow to use an emergency method to reflash your BIOS? That should make it and recover your system, if not... you will need some sort of SPI-whatever the name is interface to reprogram the BIOS and/or the NVRAM where the certs and SB variables are stored.
More than that, I'm run out of ideas... and that would mean a technician could recover your system if they have the tools.
My Computers
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