I did a fresh install of Windows 10 on both machines but I don't know that it was a necessary step. It took several hours of experimenting to figure out. Now the machines were running regular Windows 10 Home, without the need for a Microsoft account. I then rebooted and went back into the BIOS/UEFI, re-enabled Secure Boot, and removed the supervisor password.
After doing both of these things I rebooted into Windows and checked the activation status which showed that it was running an activated copy of Windows 10 Home (not in S Mode). On these machines I had to create a supervisor password before it would allow me to disable Secure Boot. First you need to get into the BIOS/UEFI by pressing the applicable key during startup (F2 on the Acer).
To give more explicit directions, which seemed to work on the Acer laptops I had success with. I had been playing the character quests as well as the gnome quests. En Out There, tendrs que sobrevivir, arreglando tu nave con lo que puedas recoger. Juego de aventura independiente donde tomaremos el papel de un astronauta criogenizado, no en el sistema solar, solamente en un lugar de la galaxia. After doing this Secure Boot can be re-enabled without Windows reverting to S Mode. Tamao: 200 Megas (Comprimido) 408 (Descomprimido) Acerca de Out There Omega Edition PC. As soon as you boot into Windows with Secure Boot disabled it appears to turn into regular Windows 10 Home. The key seems to simply be disabling Secure Boot in the BIOS/UEFI. I've been able to duplicate it on two different Acer laptops that came with Windows 10 in S Mode. After lots of tinkering I think I've found the solution. I've seen several people asking about this but not really getting a good answer.