How do I remove Candy Crush Saga from Windows 10?
Windows 10 comes with "Candy Crush Saga" preinstalled, but I do not want it on my system. How do I remove it?
windows-10 uninstall
|
show 9 more comments
Windows 10 comes with "Candy Crush Saga" preinstalled, but I do not want it on my system. How do I remove it?
windows-10 uninstall
19
CCS is not part of the default installation of Windows 10; that it came automatically on your machine could be due to OEM bloatware or the Windows Store automatically installing apps previously purchased on your Microsoft Account.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 20:29
13
@GhillieDhu that is not correct for upgrades. Please see blogs.microsoft.com/firehose/2015/05/14/…
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 20:52
17
I stand corrected. I have three W10 machines, two were upgraded pre-launch (1 Enterprise & 1 Pro) & the third had a clean install from the MSDN subscriber download; none of them have CCS.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 22:11
3
@GhillieDhu it's possible that the Pro/Enterprise flavors and/or pre-launch upgrades do not install it. Dunno about clean installs.
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 1:40
10
Minesweeper and Solitaire (and Hover! for that matter) are "in-house" games; Candy Crush Saga is a third party game -- that's the key difference to me at least. Add in the fact that I dislike and do not trust its publisher, and I am definitely not pleased with this being given to me as a "bonus".
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 19:10
|
show 9 more comments
Windows 10 comes with "Candy Crush Saga" preinstalled, but I do not want it on my system. How do I remove it?
windows-10 uninstall
Windows 10 comes with "Candy Crush Saga" preinstalled, but I do not want it on my system. How do I remove it?
windows-10 uninstall
windows-10 uninstall
edited Aug 17 '15 at 23:45
Canadian Luke
18k3087146
18k3087146
asked Aug 17 '15 at 15:54
Doktor JDoktor J
1,40141425
1,40141425
19
CCS is not part of the default installation of Windows 10; that it came automatically on your machine could be due to OEM bloatware or the Windows Store automatically installing apps previously purchased on your Microsoft Account.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 20:29
13
@GhillieDhu that is not correct for upgrades. Please see blogs.microsoft.com/firehose/2015/05/14/…
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 20:52
17
I stand corrected. I have three W10 machines, two were upgraded pre-launch (1 Enterprise & 1 Pro) & the third had a clean install from the MSDN subscriber download; none of them have CCS.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 22:11
3
@GhillieDhu it's possible that the Pro/Enterprise flavors and/or pre-launch upgrades do not install it. Dunno about clean installs.
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 1:40
10
Minesweeper and Solitaire (and Hover! for that matter) are "in-house" games; Candy Crush Saga is a third party game -- that's the key difference to me at least. Add in the fact that I dislike and do not trust its publisher, and I am definitely not pleased with this being given to me as a "bonus".
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 19:10
|
show 9 more comments
19
CCS is not part of the default installation of Windows 10; that it came automatically on your machine could be due to OEM bloatware or the Windows Store automatically installing apps previously purchased on your Microsoft Account.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 20:29
13
@GhillieDhu that is not correct for upgrades. Please see blogs.microsoft.com/firehose/2015/05/14/…
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 20:52
17
I stand corrected. I have three W10 machines, two were upgraded pre-launch (1 Enterprise & 1 Pro) & the third had a clean install from the MSDN subscriber download; none of them have CCS.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 22:11
3
@GhillieDhu it's possible that the Pro/Enterprise flavors and/or pre-launch upgrades do not install it. Dunno about clean installs.
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 1:40
10
Minesweeper and Solitaire (and Hover! for that matter) are "in-house" games; Candy Crush Saga is a third party game -- that's the key difference to me at least. Add in the fact that I dislike and do not trust its publisher, and I am definitely not pleased with this being given to me as a "bonus".
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 19:10
19
19
CCS is not part of the default installation of Windows 10; that it came automatically on your machine could be due to OEM bloatware or the Windows Store automatically installing apps previously purchased on your Microsoft Account.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 20:29
CCS is not part of the default installation of Windows 10; that it came automatically on your machine could be due to OEM bloatware or the Windows Store automatically installing apps previously purchased on your Microsoft Account.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 20:29
13
13
@GhillieDhu that is not correct for upgrades. Please see blogs.microsoft.com/firehose/2015/05/14/…
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 20:52
@GhillieDhu that is not correct for upgrades. Please see blogs.microsoft.com/firehose/2015/05/14/…
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 20:52
17
17
I stand corrected. I have three W10 machines, two were upgraded pre-launch (1 Enterprise & 1 Pro) & the third had a clean install from the MSDN subscriber download; none of them have CCS.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 22:11
I stand corrected. I have three W10 machines, two were upgraded pre-launch (1 Enterprise & 1 Pro) & the third had a clean install from the MSDN subscriber download; none of them have CCS.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 22:11
3
3
@GhillieDhu it's possible that the Pro/Enterprise flavors and/or pre-launch upgrades do not install it. Dunno about clean installs.
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 1:40
@GhillieDhu it's possible that the Pro/Enterprise flavors and/or pre-launch upgrades do not install it. Dunno about clean installs.
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 1:40
10
10
Minesweeper and Solitaire (and Hover! for that matter) are "in-house" games; Candy Crush Saga is a third party game -- that's the key difference to me at least. Add in the fact that I dislike and do not trust its publisher, and I am definitely not pleased with this being given to me as a "bonus".
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 19:10
Minesweeper and Solitaire (and Hover! for that matter) are "in-house" games; Candy Crush Saga is a third party game -- that's the key difference to me at least. Add in the fact that I dislike and do not trust its publisher, and I am definitely not pleased with this being given to me as a "bonus".
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 19:10
|
show 9 more comments
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
I was able to uninstall simply by right-clicking on the app in the Start Menu and selecting uninstall.
Typing Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
into PowerShell confirmed it is completely gone from the system, not just from the start menu.
I will be upgrading my desktop shortly (if it lets me; I have my "Users" folder in a custom location, which apparently thwarted an upgrade to 8.1) as well as my fiancee's desktop. I will test this method on both of those -- if it works this is definitely a better answer!
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 19:15
8
And how do you prevent Microsoft from reinstalling it for you because it knows better? Is there an appxpackage i can remove for "microsoft autonomously installing pay to win garbage trash, wasting my bandwidth and insulting my intelligence"?
– Cuadue
Mar 24 '17 at 18:30
When using nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html you see that even after uninstalling ... bubblewithsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga are still installed as ... url protocol handlers.
– edelwater
Dec 30 '18 at 3:16
add a comment |
Since Candy Crush Saga is a preinstalled application, you won't find it in the "Programs and Features" control panel to be removed. Instead, you have to use the Windows PowerShell to remove it. Use the following procedure:
- Click in the search box in your Taskbar and type
powershell
; select "Windows Powershell" (not "Windows Powershell ISE" if that shows up). - At the prompt, type
Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
and press Enter (TIP: to copy/paste that command, copy as usual, then just right-click in the PowerShell window to paste). - Look for the "PackageFullName" line in the result that comes up; it should be something similar to
king.com.CandyCrushSaga_1.540.1.0_x86__khqwnzmzfus32
. - Copy the PackageFullName by left-clicking and dragging to highlight it, then right-click in the PowerShell window to copy the selected text.
- Type
Remove-AppxPackage
(include trailing space) and paste the PackageFullName that you copied in step 4, then press Enter. - A teal-colored text dialog should come up showing the removal process, and then uninstall should be complete.
- Repeat step 2 to verify that it uninstalled successfully (the command should now return nothing).
- Lastly, confirm that Candy Crush Saga is no longer in your Start Menu.
- Enjoy a Candy-Crush-Free computer!
Source: Adapted from GHacks.net article on removing core apps from Windows 10
9
I wrote this specifically because I had a hard time finding how to uninstall the game when I was searching including the term "Candy Crush Saga". Hopefully this question will show up in results for future users wanting to remove it :)
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 15:55
2
Shouldn't it be in the "turn windows features on/off" area of programs?
– Raystafarian
Aug 17 '15 at 16:56
14
@Raystafarian, in a perfect world, operating systems wouldn't come with bloatware, and it shouldn't come preinstalled at all.
– Guntram Blohm
Aug 17 '15 at 19:08
3
@GuntramBlohm I meant, I don't have W10 available, but I don't see why it wouldn't be there, like regular games in other versions of windows..
– Raystafarian
Aug 18 '15 at 8:52
3
I just noticed by accident in ProcessMonitor that Candy Crush Saga was updated in "C:Program FilesWindowsAppsking.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga_1.85.500.0_x86(...)". The folder size is about 121 MB. But the program was deinstalled correctly in Powershell, i.e. the result ofGet-AppxPackage *Candy*
is empty. Any idea?
– Thorsten Albrecht
Mar 10 '17 at 17:45
|
show 3 more comments
First of all Candy Crush Saga is not a desktop program. So you can't find it "Programs and Features". It's an app just like in your mobile phone.
To remove the app,
- You can just search for Candy Crush Saga (or just "ca" does the trick), right click on the app result and then click uninstall.
- Or if Candy Crush Saga is pinned to start menu(usually it is) just right click and then click uninstall.
alternatively you can use the Windows Store or Powershell to remove the app.
add a comment |
Other answers point to the package name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
, on latest Windows 10 Pro it is king.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga
.
Regardless of the full name, run PowerShell as an administrator and execute:
Get-AppxPackage *CandyCrush* | Remove-AppxPackage
I'm not sure why this complicated answer was posted, but manual copy-paste steps are not required here.
add a comment |
// In Windows 10 v1607, this is no longer working
A better way is to disable the install during Windows 10 install. Create an unattend.xml
add this a add a RunSynchronous
command to set the registry value DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
under HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to 1
.
<RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
<Description>disable consumer features</Description>
<Order>5</Order>
<Path>reg add HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent /v DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f</Path>
</RunSynchronousCommand>
Or import this registry (.reg) file:
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent]
"DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures"=dword:00000001
Before it looks like this:
Now start menu is much cleaner:
The same thing can be achieved by using regedit to alter or create the DWORD key namedDisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
atHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to a value of1
and then restarting windows.
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 9:31
@Toby this is what my comamnd does, but this no longer works in 1607, only for Enterprise/Education
– magicandre1981
Aug 15 '16 at 13:27
Yep, just making it explicit for people that didn't want to add a file. did not realise it has changed under 1607 :(+
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 14:02
add a comment |
Most Windows 10 Apps can be uninstalled by simply right-clicking and selecting "Uninstall". If it is still showing up as an ad, simply go to the Start Menu Settings, and disable "App Suggestions" and disable the live tile for the "Store" app on the Start Menu by right-clicking and selecting More > Turn Live Tile Off.
add a comment |
And after uninstall use https://nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html to disable the protocol handlers for bubblewitchsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga (no idea why they are put in as protocol handlers)
Why the downvote? This is is what is left on my system ?
– edelwater
19 hours ago
add a comment |
Windows 10 upgrade does appear include candy crush. I have a work machine that was game free and after upgrade found ccs installed. I cannot say 100% sure but it was definitely not in the start menu until after the upgrade. Uninstalling deletes it but you still need to go to regedit and click find and input candy and you will find a number of instances and keys. Delete them, don't worry it will not cause any problems as long as they say candy crush.
add a comment |
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8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I was able to uninstall simply by right-clicking on the app in the Start Menu and selecting uninstall.
Typing Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
into PowerShell confirmed it is completely gone from the system, not just from the start menu.
I will be upgrading my desktop shortly (if it lets me; I have my "Users" folder in a custom location, which apparently thwarted an upgrade to 8.1) as well as my fiancee's desktop. I will test this method on both of those -- if it works this is definitely a better answer!
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 19:15
8
And how do you prevent Microsoft from reinstalling it for you because it knows better? Is there an appxpackage i can remove for "microsoft autonomously installing pay to win garbage trash, wasting my bandwidth and insulting my intelligence"?
– Cuadue
Mar 24 '17 at 18:30
When using nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html you see that even after uninstalling ... bubblewithsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga are still installed as ... url protocol handlers.
– edelwater
Dec 30 '18 at 3:16
add a comment |
I was able to uninstall simply by right-clicking on the app in the Start Menu and selecting uninstall.
Typing Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
into PowerShell confirmed it is completely gone from the system, not just from the start menu.
I will be upgrading my desktop shortly (if it lets me; I have my "Users" folder in a custom location, which apparently thwarted an upgrade to 8.1) as well as my fiancee's desktop. I will test this method on both of those -- if it works this is definitely a better answer!
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 19:15
8
And how do you prevent Microsoft from reinstalling it for you because it knows better? Is there an appxpackage i can remove for "microsoft autonomously installing pay to win garbage trash, wasting my bandwidth and insulting my intelligence"?
– Cuadue
Mar 24 '17 at 18:30
When using nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html you see that even after uninstalling ... bubblewithsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga are still installed as ... url protocol handlers.
– edelwater
Dec 30 '18 at 3:16
add a comment |
I was able to uninstall simply by right-clicking on the app in the Start Menu and selecting uninstall.
Typing Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
into PowerShell confirmed it is completely gone from the system, not just from the start menu.
I was able to uninstall simply by right-clicking on the app in the Start Menu and selecting uninstall.
Typing Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
into PowerShell confirmed it is completely gone from the system, not just from the start menu.
answered Aug 17 '15 at 17:24
NotsoNotso
1,104154
1,104154
I will be upgrading my desktop shortly (if it lets me; I have my "Users" folder in a custom location, which apparently thwarted an upgrade to 8.1) as well as my fiancee's desktop. I will test this method on both of those -- if it works this is definitely a better answer!
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 19:15
8
And how do you prevent Microsoft from reinstalling it for you because it knows better? Is there an appxpackage i can remove for "microsoft autonomously installing pay to win garbage trash, wasting my bandwidth and insulting my intelligence"?
– Cuadue
Mar 24 '17 at 18:30
When using nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html you see that even after uninstalling ... bubblewithsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga are still installed as ... url protocol handlers.
– edelwater
Dec 30 '18 at 3:16
add a comment |
I will be upgrading my desktop shortly (if it lets me; I have my "Users" folder in a custom location, which apparently thwarted an upgrade to 8.1) as well as my fiancee's desktop. I will test this method on both of those -- if it works this is definitely a better answer!
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 19:15
8
And how do you prevent Microsoft from reinstalling it for you because it knows better? Is there an appxpackage i can remove for "microsoft autonomously installing pay to win garbage trash, wasting my bandwidth and insulting my intelligence"?
– Cuadue
Mar 24 '17 at 18:30
When using nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html you see that even after uninstalling ... bubblewithsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga are still installed as ... url protocol handlers.
– edelwater
Dec 30 '18 at 3:16
I will be upgrading my desktop shortly (if it lets me; I have my "Users" folder in a custom location, which apparently thwarted an upgrade to 8.1) as well as my fiancee's desktop. I will test this method on both of those -- if it works this is definitely a better answer!
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 19:15
I will be upgrading my desktop shortly (if it lets me; I have my "Users" folder in a custom location, which apparently thwarted an upgrade to 8.1) as well as my fiancee's desktop. I will test this method on both of those -- if it works this is definitely a better answer!
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 19:15
8
8
And how do you prevent Microsoft from reinstalling it for you because it knows better? Is there an appxpackage i can remove for "microsoft autonomously installing pay to win garbage trash, wasting my bandwidth and insulting my intelligence"?
– Cuadue
Mar 24 '17 at 18:30
And how do you prevent Microsoft from reinstalling it for you because it knows better? Is there an appxpackage i can remove for "microsoft autonomously installing pay to win garbage trash, wasting my bandwidth and insulting my intelligence"?
– Cuadue
Mar 24 '17 at 18:30
When using nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html you see that even after uninstalling ... bubblewithsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga are still installed as ... url protocol handlers.
– edelwater
Dec 30 '18 at 3:16
When using nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html you see that even after uninstalling ... bubblewithsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga are still installed as ... url protocol handlers.
– edelwater
Dec 30 '18 at 3:16
add a comment |
Since Candy Crush Saga is a preinstalled application, you won't find it in the "Programs and Features" control panel to be removed. Instead, you have to use the Windows PowerShell to remove it. Use the following procedure:
- Click in the search box in your Taskbar and type
powershell
; select "Windows Powershell" (not "Windows Powershell ISE" if that shows up). - At the prompt, type
Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
and press Enter (TIP: to copy/paste that command, copy as usual, then just right-click in the PowerShell window to paste). - Look for the "PackageFullName" line in the result that comes up; it should be something similar to
king.com.CandyCrushSaga_1.540.1.0_x86__khqwnzmzfus32
. - Copy the PackageFullName by left-clicking and dragging to highlight it, then right-click in the PowerShell window to copy the selected text.
- Type
Remove-AppxPackage
(include trailing space) and paste the PackageFullName that you copied in step 4, then press Enter. - A teal-colored text dialog should come up showing the removal process, and then uninstall should be complete.
- Repeat step 2 to verify that it uninstalled successfully (the command should now return nothing).
- Lastly, confirm that Candy Crush Saga is no longer in your Start Menu.
- Enjoy a Candy-Crush-Free computer!
Source: Adapted from GHacks.net article on removing core apps from Windows 10
9
I wrote this specifically because I had a hard time finding how to uninstall the game when I was searching including the term "Candy Crush Saga". Hopefully this question will show up in results for future users wanting to remove it :)
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 15:55
2
Shouldn't it be in the "turn windows features on/off" area of programs?
– Raystafarian
Aug 17 '15 at 16:56
14
@Raystafarian, in a perfect world, operating systems wouldn't come with bloatware, and it shouldn't come preinstalled at all.
– Guntram Blohm
Aug 17 '15 at 19:08
3
@GuntramBlohm I meant, I don't have W10 available, but I don't see why it wouldn't be there, like regular games in other versions of windows..
– Raystafarian
Aug 18 '15 at 8:52
3
I just noticed by accident in ProcessMonitor that Candy Crush Saga was updated in "C:Program FilesWindowsAppsking.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga_1.85.500.0_x86(...)". The folder size is about 121 MB. But the program was deinstalled correctly in Powershell, i.e. the result ofGet-AppxPackage *Candy*
is empty. Any idea?
– Thorsten Albrecht
Mar 10 '17 at 17:45
|
show 3 more comments
Since Candy Crush Saga is a preinstalled application, you won't find it in the "Programs and Features" control panel to be removed. Instead, you have to use the Windows PowerShell to remove it. Use the following procedure:
- Click in the search box in your Taskbar and type
powershell
; select "Windows Powershell" (not "Windows Powershell ISE" if that shows up). - At the prompt, type
Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
and press Enter (TIP: to copy/paste that command, copy as usual, then just right-click in the PowerShell window to paste). - Look for the "PackageFullName" line in the result that comes up; it should be something similar to
king.com.CandyCrushSaga_1.540.1.0_x86__khqwnzmzfus32
. - Copy the PackageFullName by left-clicking and dragging to highlight it, then right-click in the PowerShell window to copy the selected text.
- Type
Remove-AppxPackage
(include trailing space) and paste the PackageFullName that you copied in step 4, then press Enter. - A teal-colored text dialog should come up showing the removal process, and then uninstall should be complete.
- Repeat step 2 to verify that it uninstalled successfully (the command should now return nothing).
- Lastly, confirm that Candy Crush Saga is no longer in your Start Menu.
- Enjoy a Candy-Crush-Free computer!
Source: Adapted from GHacks.net article on removing core apps from Windows 10
9
I wrote this specifically because I had a hard time finding how to uninstall the game when I was searching including the term "Candy Crush Saga". Hopefully this question will show up in results for future users wanting to remove it :)
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 15:55
2
Shouldn't it be in the "turn windows features on/off" area of programs?
– Raystafarian
Aug 17 '15 at 16:56
14
@Raystafarian, in a perfect world, operating systems wouldn't come with bloatware, and it shouldn't come preinstalled at all.
– Guntram Blohm
Aug 17 '15 at 19:08
3
@GuntramBlohm I meant, I don't have W10 available, but I don't see why it wouldn't be there, like regular games in other versions of windows..
– Raystafarian
Aug 18 '15 at 8:52
3
I just noticed by accident in ProcessMonitor that Candy Crush Saga was updated in "C:Program FilesWindowsAppsking.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga_1.85.500.0_x86(...)". The folder size is about 121 MB. But the program was deinstalled correctly in Powershell, i.e. the result ofGet-AppxPackage *Candy*
is empty. Any idea?
– Thorsten Albrecht
Mar 10 '17 at 17:45
|
show 3 more comments
Since Candy Crush Saga is a preinstalled application, you won't find it in the "Programs and Features" control panel to be removed. Instead, you have to use the Windows PowerShell to remove it. Use the following procedure:
- Click in the search box in your Taskbar and type
powershell
; select "Windows Powershell" (not "Windows Powershell ISE" if that shows up). - At the prompt, type
Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
and press Enter (TIP: to copy/paste that command, copy as usual, then just right-click in the PowerShell window to paste). - Look for the "PackageFullName" line in the result that comes up; it should be something similar to
king.com.CandyCrushSaga_1.540.1.0_x86__khqwnzmzfus32
. - Copy the PackageFullName by left-clicking and dragging to highlight it, then right-click in the PowerShell window to copy the selected text.
- Type
Remove-AppxPackage
(include trailing space) and paste the PackageFullName that you copied in step 4, then press Enter. - A teal-colored text dialog should come up showing the removal process, and then uninstall should be complete.
- Repeat step 2 to verify that it uninstalled successfully (the command should now return nothing).
- Lastly, confirm that Candy Crush Saga is no longer in your Start Menu.
- Enjoy a Candy-Crush-Free computer!
Source: Adapted from GHacks.net article on removing core apps from Windows 10
Since Candy Crush Saga is a preinstalled application, you won't find it in the "Programs and Features" control panel to be removed. Instead, you have to use the Windows PowerShell to remove it. Use the following procedure:
- Click in the search box in your Taskbar and type
powershell
; select "Windows Powershell" (not "Windows Powershell ISE" if that shows up). - At the prompt, type
Get-AppxPackage -Name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
and press Enter (TIP: to copy/paste that command, copy as usual, then just right-click in the PowerShell window to paste). - Look for the "PackageFullName" line in the result that comes up; it should be something similar to
king.com.CandyCrushSaga_1.540.1.0_x86__khqwnzmzfus32
. - Copy the PackageFullName by left-clicking and dragging to highlight it, then right-click in the PowerShell window to copy the selected text.
- Type
Remove-AppxPackage
(include trailing space) and paste the PackageFullName that you copied in step 4, then press Enter. - A teal-colored text dialog should come up showing the removal process, and then uninstall should be complete.
- Repeat step 2 to verify that it uninstalled successfully (the command should now return nothing).
- Lastly, confirm that Candy Crush Saga is no longer in your Start Menu.
- Enjoy a Candy-Crush-Free computer!
Source: Adapted from GHacks.net article on removing core apps from Windows 10
answered Aug 17 '15 at 15:54
Doktor JDoktor J
1,40141425
1,40141425
9
I wrote this specifically because I had a hard time finding how to uninstall the game when I was searching including the term "Candy Crush Saga". Hopefully this question will show up in results for future users wanting to remove it :)
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 15:55
2
Shouldn't it be in the "turn windows features on/off" area of programs?
– Raystafarian
Aug 17 '15 at 16:56
14
@Raystafarian, in a perfect world, operating systems wouldn't come with bloatware, and it shouldn't come preinstalled at all.
– Guntram Blohm
Aug 17 '15 at 19:08
3
@GuntramBlohm I meant, I don't have W10 available, but I don't see why it wouldn't be there, like regular games in other versions of windows..
– Raystafarian
Aug 18 '15 at 8:52
3
I just noticed by accident in ProcessMonitor that Candy Crush Saga was updated in "C:Program FilesWindowsAppsking.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga_1.85.500.0_x86(...)". The folder size is about 121 MB. But the program was deinstalled correctly in Powershell, i.e. the result ofGet-AppxPackage *Candy*
is empty. Any idea?
– Thorsten Albrecht
Mar 10 '17 at 17:45
|
show 3 more comments
9
I wrote this specifically because I had a hard time finding how to uninstall the game when I was searching including the term "Candy Crush Saga". Hopefully this question will show up in results for future users wanting to remove it :)
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 15:55
2
Shouldn't it be in the "turn windows features on/off" area of programs?
– Raystafarian
Aug 17 '15 at 16:56
14
@Raystafarian, in a perfect world, operating systems wouldn't come with bloatware, and it shouldn't come preinstalled at all.
– Guntram Blohm
Aug 17 '15 at 19:08
3
@GuntramBlohm I meant, I don't have W10 available, but I don't see why it wouldn't be there, like regular games in other versions of windows..
– Raystafarian
Aug 18 '15 at 8:52
3
I just noticed by accident in ProcessMonitor that Candy Crush Saga was updated in "C:Program FilesWindowsAppsking.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga_1.85.500.0_x86(...)". The folder size is about 121 MB. But the program was deinstalled correctly in Powershell, i.e. the result ofGet-AppxPackage *Candy*
is empty. Any idea?
– Thorsten Albrecht
Mar 10 '17 at 17:45
9
9
I wrote this specifically because I had a hard time finding how to uninstall the game when I was searching including the term "Candy Crush Saga". Hopefully this question will show up in results for future users wanting to remove it :)
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 15:55
I wrote this specifically because I had a hard time finding how to uninstall the game when I was searching including the term "Candy Crush Saga". Hopefully this question will show up in results for future users wanting to remove it :)
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 15:55
2
2
Shouldn't it be in the "turn windows features on/off" area of programs?
– Raystafarian
Aug 17 '15 at 16:56
Shouldn't it be in the "turn windows features on/off" area of programs?
– Raystafarian
Aug 17 '15 at 16:56
14
14
@Raystafarian, in a perfect world, operating systems wouldn't come with bloatware, and it shouldn't come preinstalled at all.
– Guntram Blohm
Aug 17 '15 at 19:08
@Raystafarian, in a perfect world, operating systems wouldn't come with bloatware, and it shouldn't come preinstalled at all.
– Guntram Blohm
Aug 17 '15 at 19:08
3
3
@GuntramBlohm I meant, I don't have W10 available, but I don't see why it wouldn't be there, like regular games in other versions of windows..
– Raystafarian
Aug 18 '15 at 8:52
@GuntramBlohm I meant, I don't have W10 available, but I don't see why it wouldn't be there, like regular games in other versions of windows..
– Raystafarian
Aug 18 '15 at 8:52
3
3
I just noticed by accident in ProcessMonitor that Candy Crush Saga was updated in "C:Program FilesWindowsAppsking.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga_1.85.500.0_x86(...)". The folder size is about 121 MB. But the program was deinstalled correctly in Powershell, i.e. the result of
Get-AppxPackage *Candy*
is empty. Any idea?– Thorsten Albrecht
Mar 10 '17 at 17:45
I just noticed by accident in ProcessMonitor that Candy Crush Saga was updated in "C:Program FilesWindowsAppsking.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga_1.85.500.0_x86(...)". The folder size is about 121 MB. But the program was deinstalled correctly in Powershell, i.e. the result of
Get-AppxPackage *Candy*
is empty. Any idea?– Thorsten Albrecht
Mar 10 '17 at 17:45
|
show 3 more comments
First of all Candy Crush Saga is not a desktop program. So you can't find it "Programs and Features". It's an app just like in your mobile phone.
To remove the app,
- You can just search for Candy Crush Saga (or just "ca" does the trick), right click on the app result and then click uninstall.
- Or if Candy Crush Saga is pinned to start menu(usually it is) just right click and then click uninstall.
alternatively you can use the Windows Store or Powershell to remove the app.
add a comment |
First of all Candy Crush Saga is not a desktop program. So you can't find it "Programs and Features". It's an app just like in your mobile phone.
To remove the app,
- You can just search for Candy Crush Saga (or just "ca" does the trick), right click on the app result and then click uninstall.
- Or if Candy Crush Saga is pinned to start menu(usually it is) just right click and then click uninstall.
alternatively you can use the Windows Store or Powershell to remove the app.
add a comment |
First of all Candy Crush Saga is not a desktop program. So you can't find it "Programs and Features". It's an app just like in your mobile phone.
To remove the app,
- You can just search for Candy Crush Saga (or just "ca" does the trick), right click on the app result and then click uninstall.
- Or if Candy Crush Saga is pinned to start menu(usually it is) just right click and then click uninstall.
alternatively you can use the Windows Store or Powershell to remove the app.
First of all Candy Crush Saga is not a desktop program. So you can't find it "Programs and Features". It's an app just like in your mobile phone.
To remove the app,
- You can just search for Candy Crush Saga (or just "ca" does the trick), right click on the app result and then click uninstall.
- Or if Candy Crush Saga is pinned to start menu(usually it is) just right click and then click uninstall.
alternatively you can use the Windows Store or Powershell to remove the app.
edited Jun 16 '17 at 20:10
answered Aug 20 '15 at 8:57
miyurumiyuru
24915
24915
add a comment |
add a comment |
Other answers point to the package name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
, on latest Windows 10 Pro it is king.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga
.
Regardless of the full name, run PowerShell as an administrator and execute:
Get-AppxPackage *CandyCrush* | Remove-AppxPackage
I'm not sure why this complicated answer was posted, but manual copy-paste steps are not required here.
add a comment |
Other answers point to the package name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
, on latest Windows 10 Pro it is king.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga
.
Regardless of the full name, run PowerShell as an administrator and execute:
Get-AppxPackage *CandyCrush* | Remove-AppxPackage
I'm not sure why this complicated answer was posted, but manual copy-paste steps are not required here.
add a comment |
Other answers point to the package name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
, on latest Windows 10 Pro it is king.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga
.
Regardless of the full name, run PowerShell as an administrator and execute:
Get-AppxPackage *CandyCrush* | Remove-AppxPackage
I'm not sure why this complicated answer was posted, but manual copy-paste steps are not required here.
Other answers point to the package name king.com.CandyCrushSaga
, on latest Windows 10 Pro it is king.com.CandyCrushSodaSaga
.
Regardless of the full name, run PowerShell as an administrator and execute:
Get-AppxPackage *CandyCrush* | Remove-AppxPackage
I'm not sure why this complicated answer was posted, but manual copy-paste steps are not required here.
edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:17
Community♦
1
1
answered Jul 3 '16 at 2:43
techraftechraf
3,983111729
3,983111729
add a comment |
add a comment |
// In Windows 10 v1607, this is no longer working
A better way is to disable the install during Windows 10 install. Create an unattend.xml
add this a add a RunSynchronous
command to set the registry value DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
under HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to 1
.
<RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
<Description>disable consumer features</Description>
<Order>5</Order>
<Path>reg add HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent /v DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f</Path>
</RunSynchronousCommand>
Or import this registry (.reg) file:
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent]
"DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures"=dword:00000001
Before it looks like this:
Now start menu is much cleaner:
The same thing can be achieved by using regedit to alter or create the DWORD key namedDisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
atHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to a value of1
and then restarting windows.
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 9:31
@Toby this is what my comamnd does, but this no longer works in 1607, only for Enterprise/Education
– magicandre1981
Aug 15 '16 at 13:27
Yep, just making it explicit for people that didn't want to add a file. did not realise it has changed under 1607 :(+
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 14:02
add a comment |
// In Windows 10 v1607, this is no longer working
A better way is to disable the install during Windows 10 install. Create an unattend.xml
add this a add a RunSynchronous
command to set the registry value DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
under HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to 1
.
<RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
<Description>disable consumer features</Description>
<Order>5</Order>
<Path>reg add HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent /v DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f</Path>
</RunSynchronousCommand>
Or import this registry (.reg) file:
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent]
"DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures"=dword:00000001
Before it looks like this:
Now start menu is much cleaner:
The same thing can be achieved by using regedit to alter or create the DWORD key namedDisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
atHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to a value of1
and then restarting windows.
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 9:31
@Toby this is what my comamnd does, but this no longer works in 1607, only for Enterprise/Education
– magicandre1981
Aug 15 '16 at 13:27
Yep, just making it explicit for people that didn't want to add a file. did not realise it has changed under 1607 :(+
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 14:02
add a comment |
// In Windows 10 v1607, this is no longer working
A better way is to disable the install during Windows 10 install. Create an unattend.xml
add this a add a RunSynchronous
command to set the registry value DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
under HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to 1
.
<RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
<Description>disable consumer features</Description>
<Order>5</Order>
<Path>reg add HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent /v DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f</Path>
</RunSynchronousCommand>
Or import this registry (.reg) file:
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent]
"DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures"=dword:00000001
Before it looks like this:
Now start menu is much cleaner:
// In Windows 10 v1607, this is no longer working
A better way is to disable the install during Windows 10 install. Create an unattend.xml
add this a add a RunSynchronous
command to set the registry value DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
under HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to 1
.
<RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
<Description>disable consumer features</Description>
<Order>5</Order>
<Path>reg add HKLMSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent /v DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f</Path>
</RunSynchronousCommand>
Or import this registry (.reg) file:
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent]
"DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures"=dword:00000001
Before it looks like this:
Now start menu is much cleaner:
edited Aug 6 '16 at 7:38
answered Jun 19 '16 at 7:21
magicandre1981magicandre1981
81.3k20125203
81.3k20125203
The same thing can be achieved by using regedit to alter or create the DWORD key namedDisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
atHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to a value of1
and then restarting windows.
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 9:31
@Toby this is what my comamnd does, but this no longer works in 1607, only for Enterprise/Education
– magicandre1981
Aug 15 '16 at 13:27
Yep, just making it explicit for people that didn't want to add a file. did not realise it has changed under 1607 :(+
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 14:02
add a comment |
The same thing can be achieved by using regedit to alter or create the DWORD key namedDisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
atHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to a value of1
and then restarting windows.
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 9:31
@Toby this is what my comamnd does, but this no longer works in 1607, only for Enterprise/Education
– magicandre1981
Aug 15 '16 at 13:27
Yep, just making it explicit for people that didn't want to add a file. did not realise it has changed under 1607 :(+
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 14:02
The same thing can be achieved by using regedit to alter or create the DWORD key named
DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
at HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to a value of 1
and then restarting windows.– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 9:31
The same thing can be achieved by using regedit to alter or create the DWORD key named
DisableWindowsConsumerFeatures
at HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsCloudContent
to a value of 1
and then restarting windows.– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 9:31
@Toby this is what my comamnd does, but this no longer works in 1607, only for Enterprise/Education
– magicandre1981
Aug 15 '16 at 13:27
@Toby this is what my comamnd does, but this no longer works in 1607, only for Enterprise/Education
– magicandre1981
Aug 15 '16 at 13:27
Yep, just making it explicit for people that didn't want to add a file. did not realise it has changed under 1607 :(+
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 14:02
Yep, just making it explicit for people that didn't want to add a file. did not realise it has changed under 1607 :(+
– Toby
Aug 15 '16 at 14:02
add a comment |
Most Windows 10 Apps can be uninstalled by simply right-clicking and selecting "Uninstall". If it is still showing up as an ad, simply go to the Start Menu Settings, and disable "App Suggestions" and disable the live tile for the "Store" app on the Start Menu by right-clicking and selecting More > Turn Live Tile Off.
add a comment |
Most Windows 10 Apps can be uninstalled by simply right-clicking and selecting "Uninstall". If it is still showing up as an ad, simply go to the Start Menu Settings, and disable "App Suggestions" and disable the live tile for the "Store" app on the Start Menu by right-clicking and selecting More > Turn Live Tile Off.
add a comment |
Most Windows 10 Apps can be uninstalled by simply right-clicking and selecting "Uninstall". If it is still showing up as an ad, simply go to the Start Menu Settings, and disable "App Suggestions" and disable the live tile for the "Store" app on the Start Menu by right-clicking and selecting More > Turn Live Tile Off.
Most Windows 10 Apps can be uninstalled by simply right-clicking and selecting "Uninstall". If it is still showing up as an ad, simply go to the Start Menu Settings, and disable "App Suggestions" and disable the live tile for the "Store" app on the Start Menu by right-clicking and selecting More > Turn Live Tile Off.
answered Jun 19 '16 at 1:28
Matthew FeganMatthew Fegan
13628
13628
add a comment |
add a comment |
And after uninstall use https://nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html to disable the protocol handlers for bubblewitchsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga (no idea why they are put in as protocol handlers)
Why the downvote? This is is what is left on my system ?
– edelwater
19 hours ago
add a comment |
And after uninstall use https://nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html to disable the protocol handlers for bubblewitchsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga (no idea why they are put in as protocol handlers)
Why the downvote? This is is what is left on my system ?
– edelwater
19 hours ago
add a comment |
And after uninstall use https://nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html to disable the protocol handlers for bubblewitchsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga (no idea why they are put in as protocol handlers)
And after uninstall use https://nirsoft.net/utils/url_protocol_view.html to disable the protocol handlers for bubblewitchsaga3 and candycrushsodasaga (no idea why they are put in as protocol handlers)
answered Dec 30 '18 at 3:20
edelwateredelwater
56211019
56211019
Why the downvote? This is is what is left on my system ?
– edelwater
19 hours ago
add a comment |
Why the downvote? This is is what is left on my system ?
– edelwater
19 hours ago
Why the downvote? This is is what is left on my system ?
– edelwater
19 hours ago
Why the downvote? This is is what is left on my system ?
– edelwater
19 hours ago
add a comment |
Windows 10 upgrade does appear include candy crush. I have a work machine that was game free and after upgrade found ccs installed. I cannot say 100% sure but it was definitely not in the start menu until after the upgrade. Uninstalling deletes it but you still need to go to regedit and click find and input candy and you will find a number of instances and keys. Delete them, don't worry it will not cause any problems as long as they say candy crush.
add a comment |
Windows 10 upgrade does appear include candy crush. I have a work machine that was game free and after upgrade found ccs installed. I cannot say 100% sure but it was definitely not in the start menu until after the upgrade. Uninstalling deletes it but you still need to go to regedit and click find and input candy and you will find a number of instances and keys. Delete them, don't worry it will not cause any problems as long as they say candy crush.
add a comment |
Windows 10 upgrade does appear include candy crush. I have a work machine that was game free and after upgrade found ccs installed. I cannot say 100% sure but it was definitely not in the start menu until after the upgrade. Uninstalling deletes it but you still need to go to regedit and click find and input candy and you will find a number of instances and keys. Delete them, don't worry it will not cause any problems as long as they say candy crush.
Windows 10 upgrade does appear include candy crush. I have a work machine that was game free and after upgrade found ccs installed. I cannot say 100% sure but it was definitely not in the start menu until after the upgrade. Uninstalling deletes it but you still need to go to regedit and click find and input candy and you will find a number of instances and keys. Delete them, don't worry it will not cause any problems as long as they say candy crush.
answered Jan 17 '16 at 15:05
RodneyRodney
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
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19
CCS is not part of the default installation of Windows 10; that it came automatically on your machine could be due to OEM bloatware or the Windows Store automatically installing apps previously purchased on your Microsoft Account.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 20:29
13
@GhillieDhu that is not correct for upgrades. Please see blogs.microsoft.com/firehose/2015/05/14/…
– Doktor J
Aug 17 '15 at 20:52
17
I stand corrected. I have three W10 machines, two were upgraded pre-launch (1 Enterprise & 1 Pro) & the third had a clean install from the MSDN subscriber download; none of them have CCS.
– Ghillie Dhu
Aug 17 '15 at 22:11
3
@GhillieDhu it's possible that the Pro/Enterprise flavors and/or pre-launch upgrades do not install it. Dunno about clean installs.
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 1:40
10
Minesweeper and Solitaire (and Hover! for that matter) are "in-house" games; Candy Crush Saga is a third party game -- that's the key difference to me at least. Add in the fact that I dislike and do not trust its publisher, and I am definitely not pleased with this being given to me as a "bonus".
– Doktor J
Aug 18 '15 at 19:10