In order to quit your session, you’ll need to shut down windows. For example, arm32 apps outright crash upon launch, and it’s also not possible to suspend the VM. In other words, there’s going to be bugs, and some things just won’t work. This is a technical preview on both sides of the fence - both from Parallels’ perspective and Microsoft’s. In this video tutorial, we show you how to run Windows for ARM on M1 Macs using Parallels. The Apple Silicon version of Parallels is specifically designed for ARM-based operating systems, so it won’t work with the x86 version of Windows 10, but instead requires the ARM version of Windows. Parallels recently released a technical preview of Parallels 16 that’s compatible with M1 Macs, and it works surprisingly well.