r34.app
Category: Adult Content
Description of r34.app
r34.app appears to be an adult-oriented content discovery site focused on "Rule 34" material, with search and browsing features for hentai and other explicit fan-created imagery. Based on the screenshot, the site lets users search by tags and browse featured sources and posts related to anime, games, and fictional characters.
The domain name, on-page text, and visible thumbnails suggest the website functions as an index or portal for explicit illustrated and animated content rather than a general-purpose platform. The operator is not clearly identified in the provided scan data, although the site uses Cloudflare-backed infrastructure and has been registered since 2019.
Safety Assessment for r34.app
At the time of this scan, no malware detections were reported by 0 out of 91 security engines, and the malware scan did not flag any files, links, or iframes. In addition, major threat-database and blacklist checks included in the scan were reported as clean. The domain has also been registered for several years, which can be a mildly reassuring legitimacy signal when considered alongside the absence of detected threats.
That said, the screenshot clearly shows explicit adult content, so the primary concern here appears to be content suitability rather than technical compromise. Adult-content sites can sometimes expose visitors to privacy, age-appropriateness, or unwanted-content risks even when no direct malware indicators are detected.
Based on available data, no threats were detected at the time of this scan, though the site appears to host or aggregate explicit adult material and may not be appropriate for general audiences.
Technical Description
The site is served through Cloudflare infrastructure on IP address 104.26.5.102, with Cloudflare nameservers and a valid SSL/TLS certificate issued by Google Trust Services that was valid at the time of the scan. The domain is approximately 6 years old, registered through Namecheap, and the observed hosting location resolves to Toronto, Canada.
No file-level or link-level technical threats were identified in the provided scan results. DNSSEC appears to be unsigned, which is not uncommon but means DNS responses do not benefit from DNSSEC validation. The reported protocol version was not provided, so a deeper TLS configuration assessment is not possible from this dataset alone.
Share your experience with this website. Was it safe? Did you encounter any issues?