Nevertheless, you can still add program shortcuts to the desktop context menu in Windows 11 by editing the registry. By doing so, you can replace desktop shortcut icons with context menu ones.
How to Add an Edge Shortcut to the Desktop Context Menu
As Microsoft Edge is the default browser included with Windows 11, that’s a software package you’ll all have to set up a context menu shortcut for. So, we’ll add an Edge shortcut to the desktop context menu for the sake of an example. This is how you can add a shortcut for that browser to the desktop context menu with a simple tweak to the Windows registry.
First, right-click the Start button on the taskbar and select Run. Enter regedit in the Open box within Run’s window. Click OK to launch the Registry Editor. Then navigate to the Computer > HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT > Directory > Background > shell registry key path. Right-click the shell key to select New and Key on the context menu. Input Edge as the new registry key’s title. Right-click your Edge key and select the New > Key options again. Enter command to be the new subkey’s name. Click File Explorer’s taskbar button. Open Edge’s folder, which has this default path: C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft\Edge\Application. Right-click msedge. exe there to select the Copy as path option shown directly below. Then return to the Registry Editor, and select the new command key you added. Double-click (Default) for the command key on the right side of the window. Press the Ctrl + V hotkey to paste the copied Edge path within the Value data box. Click OK to confirm.
Now you can try out your new Edge context menu shortcut. Right-click the desktop and select Show more options to view the classic menu. Then select Edge there to open that browser.
If you prefer, you can bring up the classic context menu in Windows 11 with a handy keyboard shortcut. Press the Shift + F10 hotkey to open the menu instead. Then select your software shortcuts from there.
How to Add Your Own Shortcuts to the Windows 11 Context Menu
You can add a shortcut for whatever software you’d like in a similar way to adding Edge. To do this, you need to change the name of the primary registry key to match the name of the software it’s for. Then, open the program’s folder in File Explorer to copy its full path, and paste it in the Value data box for the command subkey’s (Default) string.
To remove one of your software context menu shortcuts, you’ll need to open the key for it in the Registry Editor. Then right-click its primary key to select a Delete option. Select Yes to confirm and erase.
This registry tweak also works much the same in Windows 10 and earlier Microsoft desktop platforms. So, this isn’t just a Windows 11 trick. As Windows 10 has a classic context menu by default, you don’t need to click Show more options on that menu to select the shortcut.
Read also: How to Bring Back the Old Right-Click Context Menu on Windows 11
Make the Most Out of Windows 11’s Context Menu
Now you can add program shortcuts to the context menu instead of flooding your desktop wallpaper or taskbar with them. That’s a great alternative place to add your shortcuts because they don’t clutter your desktop there. There are also numerous third-party programs you can set custom context menu shortcuts with. However, it’s pretty straightforward to add software to that menu with this manual registry edit method.