The answer is storage and liability. The Windows installation image (install.wim) is already ~5GB. If Microsoft included every driver for every RAID controller, NVMe drive, and network chip from the last ten years, that file would balloon to over 50GB. Furthermore, hardware manufacturers update drivers weekly. The driver on your motherboard’s CD is already six months old by the time you open the box.
Move your USB drive from a blue USB 3.0 port to a black USB 2.0 port. Restart the installation. Windows PE has rock-solid drivers for USB 2.0; it often stumbles on early 3.0 controllers. Scenario 2: The Invisible NVMe / SSD The Error: You get to the "Where do you want to install Windows?" screen, and the list is completely blank. windows installation driver
However, the is a special breed. When you boot from a USB stick, you are running a stripped-down, temporary version of Windows called Windows PE (Preinstallation Environment) . Think of WinPE as a skeleton crew. It has just enough muscle to format drives, copy files, and launch the setup wizard. The answer is storage and liability