You could have a strong account password which is needed for remotely accessing the PC, and a simple PIN for convenience but which only works when authenticating locally.
(I'm assuming this is a personal PC and not a corporate device, in which case this model is the same but the strong password is also used for many internal single sign on resources).
Usually you pair this with a Windows Hello camera for face sign-in so you skip the logon hassle when in front of your PC.
There are settings in the group policy editor to change the Windows Hello PIN settings, but it could depend on your Windows edition and whether you have admin rights.
For example, if I use gpedit.msc > Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > PIN Complexity, I see:
Require digits, Require lowercase letters, Max PIN length, Min PIN length, etc
(I'm assuming this is a personal PC and not a corporate device, in which case this model is the same but the strong password is also used for many internal single sign on resources).
Usually you pair this with a Windows Hello camera for face sign-in so you skip the logon hassle when in front of your PC.
There are settings in the group policy editor to change the Windows Hello PIN settings, but it could depend on your Windows edition and whether you have admin rights.
For example, if I use gpedit.msc > Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > PIN Complexity, I see:
Require digits, Require lowercase letters, Max PIN length, Min PIN length, etc