No. The original Lucky Patcher is closed-source. Any repository claiming to be the "official source code" is lying or reverse-engineering the tool. This is another reason to avoid GitHub versions—you cannot verify what the code does.
Not necessarily. GitHub stars can be bought. In 2024, security researchers discovered a marketplace where developers pay $50 for 1,000 stars. A high star count is not a guarantee of safety. Check the code—or avoid the repo entirely. github lucky patcher
Some scammers create fake GitHub Pages sites (e.g., lucky-patcher.github.io) that look like official project pages. These are never official. The real Lucky Patcher does not have a GitHub organization. github lucky patcher