> TORZON MIRROR REGISTRY
Three geographically distributed Torzon v3 onion mirrors — each signed with the Torzon PGP key. Copy an address, verify the signature, and paste into Tor Browser. Mirror health checked continuously. Refreshed: 2026-05-03 UTC
MIRROR HEALTH TELEMETRY
Uptime, round-trip latency, and operational status — polled every five minutes from distributed probes.
SIGNING KEY FINGERPRINT
Import this key into GnuPG and run gpg --verify against any mirror list file we publish.
FOUR-STEP MIRROR AUTHENTICATION
A quick checklist to confirm any Torzon address is genuine before you open it in Tor Browser.
1. Import the Signing Key
Fetch the Torzon PGP public key from the Security Centre and confirm the fingerprint above.
2. Verify the Signature
Run gpg --verify on the signed mirror list. A "Good signature" result means the file has not been tampered with.
3. Count 56 Characters
All Torzon mirrors use Tor v3 addresses — exactly 56 base-32 characters before .onion. Any other length is a red flag.
Fraudulent Torzon clones are the single biggest threat to marketplace users. A cloned site looks pixel-perfect but silently harvests your credentials and drains your wallet.
- Addresses shared on Telegram, Dread, or Reddit DMs are presumed hostile until you verify the PGP signature yourself
- Cross-check the first and last eight characters of the .onion address against this page every time you connect
- Enable Tor Browser's "Safest" security level to block JavaScript-based credential interception on phishing clones
- Bookmark torzon-official.store — this clearnet domain is your single source of truth for mirror addresses
HOW TORZON'S MIRROR INFRASTRUCTURE WORKS
Understanding the engineering behind three-node onion redundancy.
Torzon distributes its marketplace across three independent v3 onion services, each running on isolated hardware in different jurisdictions. When you connect to any mirror, a load-aware routing layer directs your circuit to the node with the lowest current latency. If a node goes offline — whether from maintenance or a DDoS campaign — the remaining two absorb traffic automatically, preserving the marketplace's 99.8% aggregate uptime target.
Every January the Torzon engineering team rotates all onion service identity keys as part of a mandatory OPSEC calendar. The new addresses are signed with the same long-lived PGP master key and published here within hours of rotation. The previous addresses continue responding with a redirect notice for 30 days before final decommissioning.
This architecture means there is no single point of failure: the loss of any one node, or even two, does not take the marketplace offline. It also makes targeted seizure dramatically harder — three separate infrastructure footprints must be identified and acted upon simultaneously to disrupt service.
NEW TO THE TORZON MARKETPLACE?
Our access tutorial walks you from Tor Browser installation through your first PGP-encrypted conversation with a vendor — in under 25 minutes.
Open Access Tutorial