Go to VirusTotal.com, upload the file (or paste its hash if you have one), and review the detection ratio. A clean result (0/60+) doesn’t guarantee safety, but anything above 5–10 detections is a strong warning sign. Look at the names used by engines—terms like “Trojan,” “Keygen,” “HackTool,” or “PUA” (Potentially Unwanted Application) indicate risk.
KeyMagic is a lightweight keyboard remapping tool that lets users create and switch custom keyboard layouts, layer modifiers, and compose complex key behaviors without low-level driver changes. It’s popular among multilingual typists, programmers, and users who want ergonomic layouts without losing native input support. keymagic-v2.0.0.5.exe
The filename suggests a versioned executable (v2.0.0.5) for a program called “KeyMagic.” Based on common software naming conventions, KeyMagic could be one of several legitimate tools: Go to VirusTotal
Without a digital signature or official publisher information, it’s impossible to know for certain. However, the lack of widespread, verifiable references to “KeyMagic” as a mainstream application raises a red flag. Most legitimate utilities (AutoHotkey, SharpKeys, PowerToys) have clear web presence and signed installers. the lack of widespread