You have to delete the entire factory braking setup except for the pedal and lines (pedal and brake lines) and replace everything with aftermarket parts. So instead of having one master cylinder you would have two, one for the front and one for the rear and there are valves to proportion fluid to the front and the rear based on pedal imput.
Here is a kit but it is not cheap nor do you want to cheap out on something like this: https://www.boefab.com/products/brake-bias-cage
Me personally I think ABS is one of the best inventions on the modern day car so I would never delete it. Plus I think the factory brake bias setup by bmw is pretty good so no real need or desire on my end to change it in any way.
Thanks for explaining! Running without ABS in the wet is not something I would consider unless its a gokart and a cheap one at that haha.
I am also wondering what kind of error codes and software problems (DCT?) one would get by converting the master cylinder setup, or even converting to a standalone ABS.
That being said, I do believe the setup on your M2 must be better from factory. That car was built to use cup2 tires which can achieve semi-slick levels of grip when new. I studied a 718 running the same tires as myself, and it looks rock stable under hard braking (same track, same day). The E89 was born with street RFTs, and it seems the system was calibrated based on that.