t73.torrentpi150.com

May 22, 2026

What t73.torrentpi150.com appears to be

t73.torrentpi150.com appears to be a rotating subdomain connected to a Korean torrent-style website called TorrentPi.

A public X profile for “토렌트파이 우회주소 공식 트위터” says the current address was t72.torrentpi150.com and the next address was t73.torrentpi150.com, which strongly suggests the site changes addresses often to stay reachable.

I could not directly load t73.torrentpi150.com through the web tool because it returned a bad gateway error, so this review is based on public search results, traffic tools, ad-block reports, and security-related listings.

The site seems built around file sharing and torrents

The name itself points to torrent activity.

Public traffic data for a nearby subdomain, t69.torrentpi150.com, shows related sites such as file-hosting services, torrent sites, adult sites, and game-related sites.

Similarweb estimated t69.torrentpi150.com at about 1.2 million visits in April 2026, with users spending about 5 minutes per visit and opening more than 12 pages per visit.

SEMrush data for the main torrentpi150.com domain estimated 1.39 million visits in April 2026, though it also showed traffic had dropped compared with March.

That means this is not a tiny forgotten site.

It looks like part of a larger network that gets meaningful traffic, mostly from Korea.

The audience looks mostly Korean

Similarweb says Korea sent about 96.89% of desktop traffic to t69.torrentpi150.com in April 2026.

That fits the Korean name and the Korean-language social account.

It also fits the keywords shown in traffic tools, including Korean search terms around subtitles, entertainment, and media.

So the site is probably not trying to be a global torrent brand.

It looks more like a Korean media-download or torrent-index community that keeps changing subdomains.

The changing address pattern is important

The t73 part is probably not a random name.

Search results show many similar subdomains, including t22, t35, t69, t72, and t73.

That pattern suggests the operator may rotate addresses when older ones are blocked, filtered, reported, or become unstable.

This kind of pattern is common with torrent, streaming, adult, and piracy-linked sites.

It does not prove the site is malicious by itself.

But it does mean users should be careful.

A normal business website usually does not need many numbered mirror domains.

There are ad-blocking complaints

AdGuard filter issues exist for related TorrentPi subdomains such as t22.torrentpi150.com and t35.torrentpi150.com.

One issue for t35.torrentpi150.com was tagged as ads and later marked resolved by AdGuard contributors.

This matters because torrent and file-sharing sites often depend on heavy ads, popups, redirect ads, adult ads, fake download buttons, and tracking scripts.

The biggest risk is not always the torrent file itself.

The bigger risk is often the page around it.

A user may click a fake download button.

A user may get pushed to a “browser update” page.

A user may be sent to a file host that asks for extensions, notifications, or suspicious installers.

There are security signals worth taking seriously

AhnLab’s ASEC threat pages listed t10.torrentpi150.com in a February 19, 2026 threat-view entry alongside other URLs and IP indicators.

That does not automatically mean every TorrentPi subdomain is malware.

It does mean at least one related subdomain appeared in a security-intelligence context.

For a normal user, that is enough reason to avoid logging in, downloading executables, allowing notifications, or entering personal information.

Security tools may also flag these sites because of ads, redirects, suspicious files, or user-uploaded content.

Torrent sites are messy because the site owner, advertisers, uploaders, and file hosts may all be separate parties.

That creates risk even when the main page looks simple.

The legal risk is also real

Torrent sites often index copyrighted movies, TV shows, games, music, software, subtitles, or adult content.

Some torrents are legal.

Many are not.

If the site links to copyrighted files without permission, users may face legal or account risks depending on their country, ISP, workplace, school, or platform rules.

Even when users are only “looking,” the site may expose them to illegal copies, adult material, or unsafe third-party services.

For a business computer, school network, or shared family device, visiting this type of site is a bad idea.

What users should watch for

The biggest warning signs are simple.

Do not install a browser extension from this site.

Do not install a “codec,” “player,” “VPN,” or “download manager” from this site.

Do not allow browser notifications.

Do not enter passwords.

Do not use the same username and password you use anywhere else.

Do not download .exe, .msi, .apk, .bat, .scr, or cracked software files.

Do not trust buttons that say “fast download,” “private download,” or “verify you are human” if they lead away from the page.

Torrent pages often hide the real link among ads.

That is where many users get tricked.

My practical view

t73.torrentpi150.com looks like a mirror or upcoming address for a Korean torrent-related site.

It appears connected to a high-traffic domain family.

It also appears connected to ad-block reports and at least one security-intelligence mention for another numbered subdomain.

That combination makes it a high-risk browsing target.

I would not treat it as a safe or trustworthy website.

The best use of this information is not to visit it, but to understand what it is: a rotating torrent mirror with likely piracy, ad, redirect, and download risks.

If you are checking it for cybersecurity, block the whole torrentpi150.com domain family at DNS or gateway level, not only t73.

If you are checking it as a normal user, avoid it and use legal streaming, official software stores, and trusted download sources instead.