RARBG shutting down left a huge hole for me and I can’t figure out what’s a good alternative for it other than 1337. Any suggestions?

    • lessthanthree@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I took the time after RARBG to setup my torrenting flow. TorrentGalaxy and 1337 have been great especially combining them with Prowlarr and Radarr.

      • HerculeanTardigrade@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Is there a public tracker where scene releases of video games are not uploaded by IGG?

        TGX abd 1337x both has scene releases uploaded by IGG. I can’t seem to find non-IGG ones.

          • HerculeanTardigrade@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Thanks but I only go fitgirl for small games 'cause I’m too impatient and my pc is on the low-end. Big games are still playable although I have to set the graphics on the lowest setting and lower the resolution. I don’t mind waiting weeks to download a game

      • player2@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Here is the official tutorial: https://github.com/qbittorrent/search-plugins/wiki/Install-search-plugins#steps-to-install-search-plugins-qbittorrent-version-3110-or-more-recent

        In qBitorrent go to Search Plugins in the bottom right, then Install a New One. You’ll go to that website link I posted and find a torrent site that has lots of content you like, like 1337, and click the little download icon off to the right of it in that table. That will open a tab with some computer code looking stuff. Copy this URL of the website and in qBittorent, in the Install a New One window, select web link and paste the link to the search engine plugin you chose. I did this for the top 10 or so most relevant looking websites for me in terms of language, content type, etc.

        Now when I need a torrent I just go to my search plugin section of the program and type in the search terms I would normally use on Rarbg, and I find the movie I’m looking for.

        Here is a YouTube video I found talking about the process:
        https://youtu.be/nksLKqotTys

          • player2@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Maybe you are copying the incorrect link? All of them work for me. Make sure you are copying the link to the plugin code and not the torrent website itself.

  • IWantToFuckSpez@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Here are the sites I use with Jackett
    btdig.com
    bitsearch.to
    eztv.re
    glodls.to
    kickasstorrents.to
    limetorrents.lol
    torrentz2.nz
    2torrentz2eu.in
    torrentdownloads.pro
    torrentdownload.info
    torrentgalaxy.to
    showrss.info
    nyaa.si

    Even better if you connect Jackett with Sonarr and Radarr

    recently I got a subscription to AllDebrid.com and just connect that with Kodi + Seren or Stremio + Torrentio. Alldebrid is a torrent cache server, if you add a torrent to their site it usually is already cached on their side and then you can download the files at your maximum speed. It’s great for streaming high quality Blu-rays with Kodi or Stremio (which have built in scrapers, so no need to manually add torrents). Just google a tutorial with Kodi+Seren+Alldebrid or Stremio+Torrentio+Alldebrid. The sub is super cheap. And game torrents, like from fitgirl, are also cached on there.

    • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I highly recommend upgrading from Jackett to Prowlarr.

      More indexers available, Prowlarr syncs its indexers to the rest of the 'arr suite automatically, you can use it to manually search your indexers for whatever instead of just specific categories via the 'arrs (sending the desired results directly to your dl client), and there’s a nice history page where you can see what software performed what searches to which indexers, all the parameters it used, how many results it got, and even manually re-trigger individual searches to see the results.

      • Drudge@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I’m just starting to learn about Usenet, alldebrid, sonarr, jellyseer etc. I’m not quite getting how it all fits together, though I’ve downloaded many a torrent. Anything you could recommend?

        • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I’m not quite getting how it all fits together

          Overseer/Jellyseer/Ombi are request interfaces. You and your users submit requests for movies/shows (music too if you use Lidarr) through there.

          Those requests are fed into Sonarr/Radarr which actually manage the media files. They will search your indexers via Jackett/Prowlarr to find the most suitable torrent or nzb, dropping that into your download client (I use qbittorrent and SABnzbd, though I’ve disabled torrents for the time being.). Once completed Sonarr/Radarr will remove them from the download client, sort the files into your media folders and rename them accordingly. If a piece of media couldn’t be found, or is below your desired quality standard Sonarr/Radarr will monitor RSS feeds from your indexers and occasionally perform searches, upgrading files as they are found.

          Finally Emby/Jellyfin/Plex can scan your media folders, grab metadata from imdb/thetvdb/themoviedb and present it all nicely for you.

          If you haven’t already; putting these services behind a reverse proxy like nginx and a set of subdomains makes ease of use much better. Instead of remembering a bunch of port numbers and IPs: sonarr.domain.tld, radarr.domain.tld, etc.

          Within my local network I run Pihole both to block most ads/tracking for every device on the local network, as well as just a local dns server to resolve those domains. (I also own a public domain to easily reach my stuff remotely)

          • Drudge@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Really appreciate the info, very helpful. The *seer’s and *arr’s are much more clear, thank you.

            I’m still confused about indexers, jackett, nzb, and how alldebrid helps.

            I’m running yunohost so subdomains are a snap, and already have jellyfin running.

            • IWantToFuckSpez@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Use Alldebrid if you want to stream videos torrents directly from the internet with a media player like Kodi. You basically get a pirated version of a streaming app. You can stream in really high quality if your internet is fast enough. I recently streamed the ripped Blu-Ray version of Avatar 2 without issue which was like 100GB. I haven’t downloaded and stored a movie/show ever since I use Alldebrid with Kodi+Seren and Stremio+torrentio. It’s paid but it’s super cheap.

              If you are patient and have the storage space you can use Usenet or Jackett+Prowlarr+qBittorrent

                • IWantToFuckSpez@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  No not really, the connection with the Alldebrid servers is encrypted. So your ISP can’t see what you are downloading. But Alldebrid might store your IP and what you are downloading. So if you don’t trust them maybe a VPN is recommended. Though if you live in a country where they don’t go after individual pirates then you don’t have anything to worry about. And usually they only go after people who are sharing files, which you automatically do with torrenting, but since you only download files with Alldebrid you aren’t sharing.

            • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              Alldebrid I’m not familiar with; as far as I can tell it’s a download agrigator/cache. They collect torrents and other downloads at the slow ish speeds of peer-to-peer torrenting, then allow you to download directly from them at higher speeds as they have the full file available. Not a free service and not all that helpful imo. But to each their own.

              The reason for Jackett/Prowlarr is various indexer sites have different APIs accepting search queries and returning results in slightly different ways. Prowlarr/Jackett act as a middleman translating this information into formats each indexer and querying software understands so each of those devs don’t have to work on supporting each indexer separately. I’m pretty sure it also caches some requests/responses so you aren’t hitting indexers multiple times in a row for the same searches, helping with rate limits. As well as just providing a nice central place to manage indexers that may be used by many different bits of software in your setup.

              .nzb is the equivalent of .torrent files but for usenet.

              • Drudge@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Ah ok, thanks👍

                Last question, hopefully an easy one. How do you actually download the files without getting in trouble? Behind a VPN? Or does Usenet somehow have protection?

                • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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                  1 year ago

                  You are connecting to usenets servers via an encrypted connection and downloading directly from them. Your isp cannot inspect this traffic because of the encryption and you are not publicly broadcasting your actions (unlike with torrents) besides the initial connection to a usenet server which in itself is perfectly fine. It’s primary a message board system that also happens to be leveraged for file sharing. Nothing inherently illegal about that.

                  The usenet host assumes all the risk by hosting the content. It’s up to them to not be hosting illegal/copyrighted content. You’re just reading publicly available messages.

              • Gailthesnail@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                you have to use debrid like a streaming service in combination with a streaming app like kodi, syncler, stremio to get the full convenience. no need to scrape for torrents it just streams the file directly from the debrid cache so you can watch massive 4k blurays instantly with no buffering

    • Gailthesnail@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      i remember when i configured stremio a while back there was no built in scraper that worked with debrid. i had to google and finally found a random syncler scraper that worked

  • –Phase–@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    Since no one has posted it yet, this site hosts a massive dump of every RARBG release ever, and you can easily search through it. Games, movies, shows, books, everything RARBG ever released is available there. There’s 5 and half petabytes of data there, it’s absurdly large.

  • finestnothing@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Because I’ll shamelessly throw this on every related post: I highly recommend looking into the *arr apps. There’s Radarr for movies, sonarr for TV, readarr for books, lidarr for music, and some other smaller ones for stuff like subtitles, nsfw, comics, anime, etc. You basically setup indexer sites to search, connect them to your download client(s), add whatever you want to get, and they take care of the rest. You can even use an app called prowlarr to make a single list of the indexers and sync that list across all of your apps so it’s super easy to add more.

    Personally I have 1337x, piratebay, and internetarchive tied for highest torrent indexer priority and they get most of what I want, but I also have badasstorrents, bitsearch, eztv, kickasstorrents, torlock, torrentgalaxy, and yourbittorrent that will get searched if those three don’t have it. You can even use prowlarr to search all of your indexers for a file if you really want, but the only case for that that I’ve seen is for very niche things or things with messed up titles in the other arr apps (series scene 1 instead of the actual title is the main example, but I’ve only run across that once)

    Want to go balls to the wall with your piracy, I highly recommend looking into usenet! It’s basically like torrenting, but with a handful of massive servers that store stuff. You need to pay for an indexer which basically keeps a list of all the stuff it’s found to be uploaded on the usenet servers (I use nzbgeek since it was recommended by a friend and I have no complaints, but you’re free to find another one) so it’s not entirely free, but I get ~95% of my stuff through usenet instead of torrenting. I have it listed at a higher priority than my torrent clients since it’s a lot more reliable and safe, plus you can basically max out your bandwidth instead of fucking around with slow or stalled torrents which made the cost (I got lifetime) entirely worth it to me.

    The best part of the arr apps? You can add and use both usenet (called nzb) indexers and torrent indexers/sites! Anything that isn’t found on usenet (not found, worse or higher quality than I want, missing tags, etc) is basically always found on one of the torrent sites I have added in.

    Another huge benefit, you can also add things that have been announced but not released yet, and it will grab it for you when it’s released. Want something asap? Set it to “announced” and it may find some leaked copy of the movie when it’s available on one of your indexers. “In cinemas” is normally what I go for, then set it to webdl, Blu-ray, webrip etc to avoid cams. You can also do released to wait until it’s fully released. And you aren’t stuck with the version you have initially, the apps will automatically grab you better quality versions until it’s at the desired quality (e.g. you get a crappy 480p leaked version because you allowed it, when a 720p version is released it will grab and replace it for you). A concrete example is I have the latest season of Futurama, sonarr (handles TV shows) will grab the first episode that’s releasing tonight and it’ll be downloaded overnight most likely.

    • rosa666parks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      Just got my Usenet setup with Radarr and Sonar and I am LOVING it. It’s fast and so easy to use. Hardest part was getting all of the folders situated with my existing library. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!

      • finestnothing@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I definitely recommend adding some torrent indexers too (and using prowlarr to manage all of your indexers) if you aren’t already! Also, don’t forget to stick your download clients behind a VPN! If you’re running them all from docker (highly recommend doing this), you can route all through a gluetun container to help protect yourself from being tracked

    • lemming007@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      *arr apps still need a tracker. *Arr by itself is useless without working torrent trackers which are becoming fewer and fewer, unless you’re willing to play the private tracker games.

        • finestnothing@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Plus, you can setup multiple and it will search them all for you. I have mine skip anything with fewer than 10 seeders and I basically never get stalled torrents now. If I do, I just add that release to the blocklist and try again

    • Azzu@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Sure I’d be ok with them, but they’re private, it’s almost impossible to get on them.

      And then I was on one once, and it requires you to keep a 1.0 ratio or something. But there are plenty of power users that have a 50.0 ratio with their seed boxes, so they’re essentially “taking traffic” from 49 other people trying to maintain their 1.0 ratio. Even though I had my stuff properly seeding that I downloaded, only few downloaded from me, so I couldn’t maintain my ratio.

      • ANIMATEK@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Some of them are hard to get in, but TL and IPT are damn easy, they open up many times per year. And if you download new stuff or big torrents is always freelech so it doesn’t even count to your ratio. So, it’s quite easy actually.

        • Azzu@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I understand that private trackers are opening up, I’m just not sure how I’d ever know about it, which is what I meant with ‘impossible’.

      • ManuelC@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        There are ratio friendly private trackers. One of them is FileList. Probably you should keep an eye for open signups.

    • fidodo@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I’m concerned about the security and legal risk of having a private tracker keep track of how much you’ve uploaded.

        • fidodo@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I’m not connecting it to an account where all the different activity is correlated with each other.

          • ANIMATEK@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Ok I get your point. But I haven’t been in any tracker that ask for any private information. You just need a burner email for all you torrent related activity and that’s it.

            In a public tracker your IP is also tracked, and while is not tied to an email, you’re open to honeypot attacks (that’s how law firms try to fine you in Germany). This way they find out exactly what you tried to download, timestamped.

            As these assholes always go for the low hanging fruit, you’re mostly safe in private trackers.

  • zShxck@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    If you want i have been seeding the RARGB archive since they decided to shut it down.

  • kernelPanic@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    For games rutor.info is very up todaye. It is in Russian but name of torrents are in English. Also it doesn’t use https so always connect to it using Tor browser