TorZon Market Access / Links
TorZon Market Mirror Links, every verified onion
All six tracked TorZon Market mirror onions in a single scrollable list. Tap any address to copy. Every address routes to the same TorZon back-end; switching between mirrors mid-session is safe.
Verified TorZon Market mirrors
PGP SIGNED · 6 TRACKED- Mirror 1 torzon4v7bcakvo7qikdfknewj4dlr44hkyv4jyfrkl7ci3zqn76kiid.onion
- Mirror 2 ncmebasolcj2pmw5oy2bco4r65jbcqznrujtxcalz6e2b2jmhjlf44ad.onion
- Mirror 3 otw35cxf2rssl23tsvtqjwj32u62q4becl2jmgvekuemptxli7gt5lyd.onion
- Mirror 4 dgkozv5myc3lfpedjl2khhk6icok2xm5wmc5vg42xvbyh4fs345mopyd.onion
- Mirror 5 evwigej45n3nywbn3aqdun4o6cgjyfgxf2ts7lm6no3uotxanpeuosad.onion
- Mirror 6 tv4pfwlnoezgtzwrr33fturalfcfvdil6sly33ecx2j7lrxxyrydwdad.onion
Reading this TorZon Market mirror list
The first mirror is the operator-pinned primary. The other five are equal-status public backups. They share state across the same TorZon back-end, your account, balance, orders, and vendor reputations follow you from any address to any other. You can switch mid-session without losing anything; this is by design and is how the marketplace absorbs denial-of-service attacks against any single address.
Each address shown is the full 56-character v3 onion (base32 of an ed25519 public key plus a checksum and version byte). The "online" dot next to each entry is updated from a probe array that pings every mirror every fifteen minutes from independent Tor circuits. An address that fails three consecutive probes drops to a degraded label; sustained failure for twenty-four hours removes it from the published list pending operator confirmation.
When a TorZon Market mirror rotates
Rotation is operator-driven. The retired address stops resolving within a few hours after the rotation announcement; there is no redirect, no replacement banner, nothing on the dead onion. The new address shows up as a fresh PGP-signed Dread post by the operator. Within a day of that post, this list is updated against the signed source. Stale bookmarks pointing at retired addresses simply return destination-unreachable errors, which is annoying but safe; bookmarks pointing at a hijacked phishing replacement are the actual risk.
Phishers watch for the same rotation announcement and try to publish a vanity-prefix copy faster than the legitimate update propagates. That is why every address on this list is checked character-by-character against the signed post, not pulled from chat groups or forum replies. The signature is the canonical proof; everything else is rumour.
Why TorZon Market keeps multiple mirrors
One address is easy to attack. Six addresses at once make a denial-of-service campaign expensive and exhausting, because the attacker has to flood every onion to take TorZon offline. Two or three usually stay reachable on a bad day, which is why the marketplace has stayed online through every attack wave since launch even when individual mirrors went down for hours.