Even a cursory glance at the spread of COVID-19 pandemic across different regions of the world reveals a variety of pattern, some incidentally interesting and a few possibly instructive. While rich-poor, urban-rural and cold-warm polarities of the zones of its spread appear intriguing, it’s also quite instructive to see the rather clear instance of the pandemic being less virulent in areas that are regarded as Malaria-prone. Be it the African mainland barring the Mediterranean coastal countries, central patch of the two continental Americas or even South and Southeast Asia; they have all been places where Malaria transmission occurs, and yet these places have so far comparatively been less impacted by the viral pandemic.