Instead, buy a legitimate second-hand Soundpool DVD Collection (Vol. 1–10) from a market like eBay Kleinanzeigen (Germany) or CEX (UK). Or subscribe to the in-app Soundpool Center for legal, clean, updated loops.
| Part | Meaning | |------|---------| | | The core software | | Soundpool | Loop/sample collection | | DVD.collection | Originally distributed on physical DVDs | | Mega.pack | A bundle of multiple Soundpools | | 9.19 | Not an official version number; possibly a user-assembled pack number or date code | | 1l bevitak | Unknown; likely a scene release tag, typo, or username | | Part | Meaning | |------|---------| | |
A: Unknown – likely a cracker’s tag, a typo of “bevitak” (Croatian for “runaway”?), or a random string. You’re better off with an official Soundpool download
A: Possibly, if the files are legit .MAGIX formats. But the “9.19 1l” version often lacks the proper registry entries and fails. You’re better off with an official Soundpool download. no – actual versions: 2013=10
If you already downloaded this pack – run a full antivirus scan immediately and delete any .exe or .bat files from the archive. Only keep .wav loops after scanning them with VirusTotal. Q: Is “MAGIX Music Maker 9.19” a real version? A: No. The last major version numbers were 8 (2013), 9 (2014? no – actual versions: 2013=10, 2015=19, 2016=21. “9.19” is fabricated.)
For music producers looking for affordable loops, MAGIX’s current subscription model offers thousands of legal Soundpools for less than $10/month. If you need nostalgia, buy used DVDs from trusted sellers. Always avoid random “Mega Packs” with anomalous version numbers and strange tags – your computer’s security is worth more than a few hundred dusty samples. Disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes. The author does not condone software piracy. Always download software and sample packs from official sources.
It is important to clarify upfront that does not correspond to an officially released product name from MAGIX AG. Instead, this string appears to be a user-constructed or pirate-release title, combining several legitimate MAGIX product descriptors with what looks like a random or misspelled identifier (“1l bevitak”).