This is a perplexing addition. In proper scene release conventions, “-TZ-” does not belong. “TZ” is sometimes used as an abbreviation for “The Zone” (a private file transfer network) or could indicate a repack by a different uploader. More likely, “-TZ-” is a corruption of the filename added by a third-party website or P2P user to distinguish their upload from others. Official RELOADED releases follow a strict naming pattern (e.g., StarCraft.II.Wings.of.Liberty-RELOADED), so the “TZ” suffix suggests this is a repack, a modified installer, or a fake.
Piracy is copyright infringement. While individuals are rarely sued for downloading a single game, your ISP can flag your activity. Furthermore, using a cracked version often means bypassing license agreements, which is a civil violation. StarCraft.II.Wings.of.Liberty-RELOADED -TZ-
Some users argue that once a game is over a decade old—and especially after it became free—preserving a version that works entirely offline is a form of digital archiving. However, Wings of Liberty is not abandonware. Blizzard still supports and distributes it. This is a perplexing addition
The 2010 RELOADED crack is based on version 1.0 of the game. Here is what you miss: Piracy is copyright infringement