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It does depend on firmware too because I know there are some bioses that originally had access to undervolting somehow lost it when the bios version was upgraded. It's called Plundervolt.On my Asus i7-11370H laptop I couldn't do 'undervolting' when using Windows 10 (but two years ago). And there is no voltage access in the bios, you can only disable virtualisation.
Is it just Windows or is there firmware dependency?
Yes, on my previous MSI i5-9400H laptop everything would have worked.

Intel & OEMs are disabling undervolting. Here's how to re-enable it
Update - January 22, 2022
www.ultrabookreview.com
In any case, you may want to look at this:
In my case, Windows File Explorer is non-responding most of the time except when the system first starts up.
What exact model is your ASUS i7-11370H?
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows XP/7/8/8.1/10/11, Linux, Android, FreeBSD Unix
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Dell XPS 15 9570
- CPU
- Intel® Core™ i7-8750H 8th Gen 2.2Ghz up to 4.1Ghz
- Motherboard
- Dell XPS 15 9570
- Memory
- 64GB using 2x32GB CL16 Mushkin redLine modules
- Graphics Card(s)
- Intel UHD 630 & NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti with 4GB DDR5
- Sound Card
- Realtek ALC3266-CG
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 15.6" 4K Touch UltraHD 3840x2160 made by Sharp
- Screen Resolution
- 3840x2160
- Hard Drives
- Toshiba KXG60ZNV1T02 NVMe 1TB SSD
- PSU
- Dell XPS 15 9570
- Case
- Dell XPS 15 9570
- Cooling
- Stock
- Keyboard
- Stock
- Mouse
- SwitftPoint ProPoint
- Internet Speed
- Comcast/XFinity 1.44Gbps/42.5Mbps
- Browser
- Microsoft EDGE (Chromium based) & Google Chrome
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender that came with Windows