If you have ever tried to install a modern piece of software—like Python 3.6+, Node.js, Chrome, or even a new game launcher —on Windows 8.1 or Windows Server 2012 R2, you’ve probably run into a cryptic error message that led you here: “This update is not applicable to your computer.” The update in question is KB2999226 (64-bit version). On the surface, it looks like just another security or reliability patch. In reality, it was one of the most quietly significant updates Microsoft ever released for the Windows 8.1 ecosystem.
The latest VS 2022 runtimes may include their own bundled UCRT. Some apps ship the DLLs locally. However, best practice is still to install the OS-level update. How to Check If It’s Installed Method 1 – Command line:
Let’s pull back the hood. File Name: windows8.1-kb2999226-x64.msu Release Date: September 9, 2014 Size: ~1.3 MB (small, but mighty)
If you skip it, you’re not only missing modern app compatibility—you’re also leaving your system open to specific runtime-based exploits that were patched in 2015. Yes, if you still run Windows 8.1.
Without KB2999226, those applications would immediately fail on launch with:
This update introduces the to Windows 8.1 and Windows Server 2012 R2.
dism /online /get-packages | findstr "2999226" Look in C:\Windows\System32\ for ucrtbase.dll . If it exists and its version is 10.0.10240.16384 or higher, you have the update. The Bottom Line windows8.1-kb2999226-x64 is a runtime infrastructure update , not a typical bug fix. It bridged the gap between Windows 8.1 and the modern Windows 10 app ecosystem.
Before this update, many Windows components relied on older, fragmented C runtime libraries (like MSVCRT, MSVCP from Visual Studio 6 through 2013). The UCRT became the single, standardized C runtime for Windows starting with Windows 10.