As posted previously, when tested on this & my wife's PC, the software's bootable USB stick doesn't work to boot a PC with UEFI BIOS & Secure Boot. [I checked the version history on the EaseUS site to make sure this was not a newer version that what I tested.] The GUI is also a bit too simplified for serious work IMHO, but that doesn't matter all that much if you can't restore a backup after a disk failure. To do that you need to boot to a working copy of Windows [or Linux] that's has Todo Backup installed, & if the Todo Backup USB stick won't boot, you can't. You could remove the hard disk / SSD & attach it to a working PC or laptop, or install Todo Backup on a working Windows To Go drive, but it's simpler/easier to just use a backup app that works like it should.
Today the best alternative is Macrium Reflect Free or Paid -- it's uncertain how much longer the free download will be available however, since the free version is "being retired". DiskGenius has free & portable versions that include both image backups & partitioning, and their USB sticks work. O&O Disk Image doesn't do as much as DiskGenius, but the GUI is much less confusing, and they've been almost continuously running sales, e.g., offering 5 PC licenses for $25. This & Paragon HDM [which seems to be no longer in active development] are the only two backup apps I'm aware of that will save image backup archives in the Windows VHD formats. The USB sticks created with O&O Disk Image work, though creating one *may* be a hassle -- YMMV.
I was able to create a working bootable USB stick running O&O Disk Image in a VirtualBox VM, but the software didn't behave the way it was supposed to, so it took some playing around. Everything did work properly in my regular copy of Win11, but not in a copy of Win10, where it could not find the recovery partition. The same thing happened in another copy of Win10, but it recognized that the Win11 ADK was installed, so it got WinPE from that instead of the recovery partition.