

If you need more protection than that, there’s also a multi-device option that costs an extra dollar ($75) to protect three devices for a single year.

Quick Heal Total Security is priced at $74 for one user for one year. If you have a ton of duplicate photos, for example, you can use this tool to find them and save on disk space. One nice differentiator to PCTuner is a duplicate file finder under PCTuner > Tools. Quick Heal’s PCTuner operates as its own mini-app that launches in its own window. A better solution than all these dots and arrows would be to have a slightly larger default window so that users can see everything at once. You can click those directional arrows, but not the circles, which is unintuitive. When you want to click the carousel to get to that final tile there are directional arrows, as well as two circles that indicate whether you’re on page one or two. What’s odd about these category tiles is that there are five total, but only four appear at one time because the window size is not adjustable. Under that are five category tiles that house all the various settings for Quick Heal Total Security: Files & Folders, Emails, Internet & Network, Parental Control, and External Drives & Devices.

At the top is a large banner letting you know whether the system is secure or if an issue needs your attention. Overactive alerts aside, Quick Heal is an okay antivirus suite that tries to put everything you need front and center. Quick Heal Total Security’s default view.
