Official Mirror Directory

Torzon Official
Mirror Directory

Both verified Torzon Market addresses, PGP-authenticated by the market team. Copy directly into Tor Browser — no intermediate links, no redirects.

Active Mirrors

Verified Onion Addresses

Primary Address Online — Verified
[Loading address…]
Uptime 30d: 99.3% Response: 0.9s avg Last verified: April 24, 2026
Mirror Address Online — Verified
[Loading address…]
Uptime 30d: 97.1% Response: 1.3s avg Last verified: April 24, 2026
Understanding Mirrors

Why Two Addresses Exist

Why mirrors exist

A single .onion address creates a single point of failure. Tor hidden services are resilient against surveillance, but high-volume traffic and occasional infrastructure maintenance necessitate redundancy. Torzon's two addresses point to the same backend platform — your account, orders, and messages are identical on both. If one address times out, switching to the other costs you ten seconds and no data.

How the mirror shares data

Both Torzon mirrors run on an encrypted replication channel. Writes to one address propagate to the other within seconds. The market team maintains both addresses actively — neither is a passive fallback with degraded functionality. Uptime is tracked independently, which is why the two addresses occasionally show different percentages in the table above.

How to confirm you have the right address

Torzon signs all address announcements with a PGP key whose fingerprint is pinned to Torzon's Dread subdread. Before you save an address, download the most recent signed announcement, run gpg --verify, and compare the address string directly. The market also embeds the address in a signed PGP block on the homepage — a second verification path available without leaving the site.

Mirror30-day uptimeAvg responseStatus
Primary99.3%0.9 sOnline
Mirror97.1%1.3 sOnline
Verification

Verifying the Addresses Yourself

Torzon has a documented history of phishing replicas that mimic the interface precisely. The replica sites have identical visual design — the only detectable difference is the .onion address. A single transposed character in a 56-character string is invisible under casual inspection. PGP verification closes this gap in under two minutes.

  1. Get Torzon's public PGP key from the Dread forum's Torzon subdread. The fingerprint is pinned to the sidebar. Use it to cross-reference any key you download.gpg --import torzon-market-pubkey.asc
  2. Download the latest signed announcement. The team posts a PGP-signed address update after any address change and on a weekly schedule regardless.
  3. Verify the signature:gpg --verify torzon-announcement.txt.ascA "Good signature" means the announcement came from the legitimate team. Anything else is a reason to stop.
  4. Compare character by character. Use diff or paste both addresses side by side in a text editor with a monospace font. Transposed characters are invisible at a glance but obvious in alignment.
Phishing notice: Addresses shared in Telegram groups, Reddit threads, or Discord servers are not verifiable. Any address you didn't personally verify against a PGP-signed announcement should be treated as unconfirmed until you complete the steps above. This site uses PGP verification for every address listed.

Need the full access guide?

Tor Browser setup, connection walkthrough, security configuration, and first-trade instructions — all in one place.

Read the access guide