What exactly is Lucky Patcher?
Nowadays splitting applications has turned out to be so across the board a practice on Android that it's incited a pitiful mass migration toward Freemium models to put the brakes on unsustainable levels of theft. Lucky Patcher is an apparatus that is not intended for breaking purposes, but rather offers a progression of components to control applications that, illicit acts aside, let you do certain operations which in particular circumstances may be of extraordinary help (regardless of how much the way of the application appears to point the other way).
Lucky Patcher analyzes the list of installed apps on your
device and indicates the actions you can carry out, among which you’ll find the
possibility to remove the license verification included on many apps that
requires them to be downloaded from Google Play to work; modify the associated
permissions; extract the APK file to do backups; and other illicit actions like
removing Google Ads or unlocking paid apps to be able to install them on other
devices. The latter in particular we obviously do not support around here.
The only requirement to use Lucky Patcher is to have a
rooted device, which is really easy to do with tools like TowelRoot or KingRoot
even if you’re not super skilled in the subject. Once you install and run Lucky
Patcher you’ll get a list of all your installed apps alongside the actions you
can do with them, as well as a color code on the title that indicates the
compatibility with the tool when it comes to doing certain operations:
Buttons
Green: Can be registered and disconnected from Google Play
Yellow: Has a specific patch available
Blue: Includes Google Ads
Purple: A system startup app.
Orange: A system app.
Red: Cannot be modified.
Although some of the mentioned operations are completely
illegal, others can get you out of more than one predicament. The association
of an app with Google Play, for instance, can make it very complicated to
install it from external sources, forcing you to go through the official
Android store, which a lot of people prefer not to do. On the other hand, by
extracting apps and eliminating their permissions you can make apps run on
devices that on the surface are incompatible, or transfer apps between
smartphones and tablets that officially are not compatible with both platforms.
All this is just a teeny part of what you’ll find on LuckyPatcher, which offers loads of info about each app that could be highly
helpful, from a compendium of all the associated permissions and their
descriptions to the minimum version of Android required to run the app. It even
tells you if an app has been modified or is the original, an ideal feature for
checking the trustworthiness of an app you may have downloaded from some dusty
corner of the Internet.

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