

It is a casual puzzle game that starts out easy but the difficulty is ramped up at just the right speed. Zuma deluxe is the most difficult Popcap game I have played and offers a lot of fun. It’s pretty simple, but the game increases in map challenges and speed, so it can get intense, interestingly enough. You just shoot the on-rails moving balls with your static frog turret so the ball colors match and clear the level before the time runs out. You do this by firing one via the frog at groups of two or more of the same color. Nothing too fancy, but it’s so effective as a time killer. In this game there an adventure mode, where you complete levels by hitting a certain points threshold, and a survival mode with four difficulty levels where the balls just keep coming until you lose. The gameplay is simple, match three balls of the same color together and get combos. Zuma game is simple, a stone frog is dropped into the center of the screen, from a birds-eye view 2 (dimension game). Personally am inclined to believe it is safe, and this is just a false positive by over-zealous scanning engines.OS: Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10įile Name: Zuma Deluxe for Windows 32 and 64 bit setup exeĪs one of the PopCap classics from the mid-2000s. While the vast majority of well-known engines indicate it is safe (Kaspersky, Sophos, Symantec, Microsoft, Avast, AVG, BitDefender, TrendMicro, DrWeb etc).

None of the positive results show anything outright alarming or malicious, but seem to be mundane or generic warnings of PUP/A (potentially unwanted program/application). Some share a common thread of indicating possible bundled adware this is usually from engines which are particularly cautious and more likely to throw a false positive (Avira for example) while others are one-off engines. I have uploaded the file to VirusTotal where it is scanned by multiple engines and here are the results: As previously explained it was common of the era.

File is probably clean and detections are a result of sometimes being bundled with adware.
