Browser downloads fail often due to network glitches or MEGA’s session expiring. This tool excels at resuming interrupted downloads from exactly where they stopped. Even better, it auto-retries failed connections, making it ideal for unstable internet connections.
This is the big one. Mega Downloader is not an official MEGA product. The last official version (1.8) was released years ago, and the developer is anonymous. While virus scans on VirusTotal typically come back clean, you are entering your MEGA account credentials (if you choose to log in) or at least downloading files through unverified code. Some antivirus software flags it as “hacktool” due to its bandwidth-bypassing nature.
Rating: 7.5/10 Value: 9/10 (it’s free, and nothing free works this well for its niche) Safety: 5/10 (use at your own risk) Last tested: January 2026 – Still functional against current MEGA infrastructure.
In real-world tests (100Mbps connection), it consistently saturates your bandwidth, often matching or exceeding MEGA’s own browser-based download speeds—sometimes faster because it doesn’t rely on JavaScript decryption overhead. Where It Falls Short (The Cons) 1. The “Outdated” Look The interface is stuck in 2010. Grey boxes, basic buttons, and a clunky URL input field. It’s functional but feels abandoned. There’s no dark mode, no modern progress indicators (just a classic progress bar), and no tabbed browsing.