The Tor Network is free software that routes your traffic through multiple volunteer-run relays, anonymizing your origin IP and encrypting your communications end-to-end. You run Tor Browser, connect to the network, and your packets bounce through three randomly selected nodes before exiting to the destination—no single relay knows both where you came from and where you're going.
Tor matters because it defeats passive network surveillance and makes DNS queries, HTTP requests, and other traffic resistant to ISP-level snooping. It's used by journalists, dissidents, activists, and privacy-conscious people in countries with heavy censorship. It's also used by people doing things they prefer not to advertise.
Tor hidden services (.onion addresses) let you host a website or service accessible only over Tor, with the server's location cryptographically obscured. This is how most darknet markets, whistleblower drop boxes, and censorship-resistant forums operate.
Bunkerdomains relevance: Tor users often register .onion domains through us because we accept crypto, ask no questions, and don't snitch. We also host our own .onion mirror so you can access our site from inside Tor without exit-node risk.