Anubis Market — questions & answers

Anubis Market topic hub. Onion endpoints, native Ethereum acceptance, currency breakdown, bonded vendor pool notes.

Anubis Market onion endpoints — verified set

Current v3 onion endpoints for Anubis Market. Verify the full 56-character fingerprint against the operator’s PGP-signed announcement on Dread before logging in. Click any address to open in Tor.

Anubis launched in 2024. The interface is English. Under the hood it's a normal darknet market — escrow, vendor profiles, mod-arbitrated disputes. What makes it worth a separate page is two things: how many coins it takes, and how the login fights bots. Either alone wouldn't be enough to bother with. Together they're the reason to use it.

It's the only market here that natively takes four coins: BTC, LTC, ETH and XMR. Ethereum's the interesting one. Most markets that 'accept' ETH are actually piping it through a conversion bridge that swaps to BTC or XMR behind the scenes. Anubis just gives you an Ethereum deposit address and watches the chain directly. If you're holding ETH and the alternative is paying a bridge fee, this matters.

The login is where Anubis shows its priorities. Form field names rotate on every page load. Visible-but-fake input fields sit next to the real ones. The captcha's six tiles, each a rotated character. A script can't just hard-code field names and bash through it — bots fill the decoys, trip the honeypot, and the request silently dies. You don't see any of this as a human.

Vendors put up a bond at signup. If they exit-scam mid-orders, that money goes to the buyers they screwed. New vendors run escrow-only for a while — they can't finalize-early until they've earned it from the ops team. Deal count and dispute ratio show up at the top of every vendor page, so the 'is this vendor okay' check takes about thirty seconds.

3 answered questions