I am really not trying to argue with you, But Please give me a link that proves me wrong, here is a report from HWinfo utilty:

Computer: Apple MacPro5,1
CPU: Intel Xeon E5520 (Nehalem-EP, D0)
2266 MHz (17.00x133.3) @ 1595 MHz (12.00x133.0)
Motherboard: Apple Mac-F221BEC8
Chipset: Intel 5520 (Tylersburg 36D) + ICH10 Consumer
Memory: 49143 MBytes, ?-???
Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680 (GK104) [eVGA.com]
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680, 2048 MB GDDR5 SDRAM
Drive: ST4000DM000-1F2168, 3907.0 GB, Serial ATA 6Gb/s @ 6Gb/s
Drive: WDC WD10EADS-00P8B0, 976.8 GB, Serial ATA 3Gb/s
Drive: Samsung SSD 840 Series, 117.2 GB, Serial ATA 6Gb/s @ 6Gb/s
Drive: SanDisk Ultra II 480GB, 468.9 GB, Serial ATA 6Gb/s @ 6Gb/s
Drive: SanDisk Ultra II 480GB, 468.9 GB, Serial ATA 6Gb/s @ 6Gb/s
Drive: ST95005620AS, 488.4 GB, Serial ATA 3Gb/s
Drive: HL-DT-ST DVD-RW GH41N, DVD+R DL
Drive: RAID DummyDevice, Unknown device
Sound: Intel ICH10 - High Definition Audio Controller [A0]
Sound: NVIDIA GK104 - High Definition Audio Controller
Network: Intel 82574L Gigabit Network Adapter
Network: Intel 82574L Gigabit Network Adapter
OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Home (x64) Build 14393.351 (RS1)

If I was running Windows 10 in a Virtual Environment, I could not use my GTX 680 2GB GPU for graphics, and I would have a Virtual Hard drive with the OS installed on it.

By the way, did you look at the link I provided about Installing Windows?

I will gladly allow you to connect to my system using Teamviewer so you can show me how to verify that I am in a Virtual Environment... Maybe we can figure out this together..:)