I just play on my go2 i guess there nothing important there anyway except another porn game
If you gonna wait for another crack i say it now don't bother i doubt anyone would just magically make a new crack out of denuvo game it not easy some game took month lots of them took several month and that the game that have dedicated cracker working on it
So either roll with it now or don't at all and buy
I mean, when I usually see a virus it's on something nobody else is cracking. Desperation and lack of alternatives = payday. The stuff that, funny enough, rarely has virus in the cracks now is the big name software because people just want the visibility of being the most popular photoshop CC version.
No way to know for sure, if I had the original uncracked file i could do some testing.
The cracked file is 27/68 in
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, It really could be a false positive, several positive results are heuristics or by machine learning, but for me, 27 is a lot for a false positive.
To get around Denuvo, you're defintiely going to need some virus-like behavior. Denuvo itself would likely trigger a warning if it wasn't whitelisted. When it comes to cracks to Denuvo and a 1/3rd alarm rate, I'd say play this on your junky old laptop that you've wiped of anything exposing, damaging, or precious. Or play it in Windows 10 virtual box, running sandboxie inside it, because you can copy a "State" of sandboxie to load later. Basically allowing someone to carry forward their progress by moving their saved "State" in and out of fresh windows 10 sandboxes when desiring to play. Realistically, I think you'd have to crack Denuvo with lots of memory re-writing. Reading areas that are attempting to be private/invisible to other programs, etc.
For the general public, another sign that a "positive" result in virus total is just AI, is if the detected virus is named with a bang. (the ! symbol) (( Trojan.somename.b!m for example. Other databases spell it out as AI or heur/ heuristic )
This generally means that the "virus" code was detected by AI, but not verified as code being used for a malicious purpose by a human. If the best way to do something is also the way a virus would do it, that will cause a program to end up getting flagged as using virus code. How software avoids getting virus alerts is they get a digital certificate with virus scanner authorities. It's basically where developers share information with the virus scanner companies, something like a hash for a "True" file, and that is all taken into consideration to create an invisible exception for that program.
The reason AI is involved at this point is A.) too many malwares get created on a daily basis to human review them all. B.) To try to catch zero-day exploits. Before they shut down pipelines or power plants. Often times a new virus will steal methods from previous virus, and detecting those previous methods = catching the upgraded virus based on it.
Since no cracker/hacker is going to get a digital certificate for breaking the copy protection on someone else's software... well, that AI flag is there for good.