1. Clone sites and fake TorZon links

Search engines, forums and messaging apps are full of URLs claiming to be “official TorZon links”. Many of these are clones designed to collect logins, PGP messages and cryptocurrency deposits.

2. Impersonated support and escrow staff

On channels that discuss TorZon, scammers often pose as market staff or “trusted” vendors, offering to resolve disputes faster if buyers send funds directly to them instead of using normal workflows.

3. Exit scams disguised as maintenance

Some markets announce temporary maintenance, encourage users to keep funds in wallets, then never come back. Others quietly disable withdrawals first, a pattern that TorZon observers watch for closely.

4. Too‑good‑to‑be‑true offers

Very low prices, implausible guarantees and pressure to pay outside normal systems are classic scam signals, regardless of whether they are branded with TorZon or any other market name.