Amorphous alloys have high strength, but softening can lead to room temperature brittleness, limiting their applications. Typically, soft means low hardness and yield strength, and the lower the yield stress, the higher the fracture toughness. Two amorphous/crystalline multilayer samples with submicron single layer thickness were prepared. The crystalline layer of one sample is composed of highly-textured (111) nanocrystalline grains, and the other sample is untextured. Indentation experiments proved that the samples were plastically deformed, while the amorphous layer did not form shear bands with decreased layer thickness. The thickness reduction of the amorphous layer in the sample with highly-textured crystalline layers is greater than in the sample with untextured crystalline layers. The strain-hardening ability of the textured crystalline layer is higher, while the corresponding amorphous layer is deformed more severely with free volume annihilation and greater flow with more compact atoms. The amorphous layer corresponding to the untextured crystalline layer absorbs dislocations, and activates shear transformation zones (STZs), increasing the free volume near the interface. The annihilation of the free volume is less than the sample with highly-textured crystalline layers.