I was thinking, mbam, have you got other suggestions for Windows 10? Also, is there a good setup for when I’m running games I bought, and I don’t need active scanning of threats? (Especially for legit games that use resources intensively)

  • Most antivirus especially the free ones are not good and are kinda malware themselves. What you can do is to not download from very sketchy sites and maybe try uploading the binary to virustotal. Maybe also check if the binary is very obfuscated

    •  umbrella   ( @umbrella@lemmy.ml ) 
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      2 months ago

      cant stress this enough. read the tos on most antiviruses, they are free for a reason.

      if you are on windows, use defender, its built in and enabled by default, so no need to worry.

      use virustotal to scan files you download, and run it in a vm first if you still think it might be malicious.

        •  umbrella   ( @umbrella@lemmy.ml ) 
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          2 months ago

          VM with gpu rendering enabled (good emulation driver or passthrough), not enough for the best performance, but you can use software like fswatch (linux only, but windows certainly has something like it too) to see if the game will change anything on your system that it shouldnt.

          the best course of action for games is finding a realiably safe source for them so you don’t have to do this every single time.

      • This. Better not install any antivirus (other than windows defender) but ANY malware just a bit more sophisticated than something from a scriptkiddie can EASILY bypass windows defender. So please just don’t download from sites where you can download free games as all of those sites I have seem have malware in all their games. And remember just because you don’t see that there is a virus in your computer most malware just hide and silently mine bitcoin or other crypto and steal your credentials to for example discord