Why this directory
Phishing works because people type.
The .onion address is 56 characters long. A single wrong character lands you on a site that looks identical to Torzon, behaves identical to Torzon, and drains every transaction you attempt. That's the business model of the phishing clones — low cost to build, high return when even one person falls in.
This directory solves exactly one problem: surface the current, verified Torzon mirror addresses, in a place that doesn't require trust in a Google result. Each address is cross-checked against the PGP-signed announcements Torzon publishes on Dread. Every mirror status is polled every four minutes. When a mirror drops, the badge next to it changes. When a new one launches, it lands here after cross-verification — not before.
The 84,491 registered users on Torzon rely on a chain of trust that starts with copying the right address. We exist to keep that link unbroken. No tracker scripts on this page. No ad injection. No sponsored placements rearranging which mirror shows first. The order is arbitrary and rotates daily.
Torzon itself is the largest English-language darknet marketplace, active since September 2022. It survived the June 2025 consolidation when Operation Deep Sentinel displaced 600,000+ users from Archetyp, absorbing roughly 8,000 of those refugees while maintaining 98%+ uptime. That's not an easy number to hit during a genuine industry shock. Why it works is covered further down — the short version is that post-quantum cryptography, time-locked escrow, and RAM-only servers aren't marketing bullets, they're architectural choices made three years ago.
So: you're here, you've got a page full of verified addresses, and you want the shortest path to not getting phished. Good. Scroll to the mirrors section, copy one, paste into Tor. If you want the full walkthrough, the eight-step guide covers Tor setup, PGP key generation, 2FA, and a small test order. It takes about 20 minutes end-to-end.