rule34.us
Category: Adult Content
Description of rule34.us
rule34.us appears to be an adult-oriented imageboard focused on user-browsable erotic fan art, animated images, and videos. The page title and meta description indicate that it indexes "Rule 34" content tied to popular games, anime, comics, and entertainment franchises, and the screenshot shows a searchable gallery-style interface with account and comments features.
Based on the visible interface, the site appears to run on a Gelbooru-style imageboard platform and functions primarily as a content archive rather than a general-purpose social network or online store. The domain has been active for several years and has measurable web traffic presence, which suggests it is an established niche adult-content website rather than a newly created domain.
Safety Assessment for rule34.us
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 of the sampled files, links, or referenced domains. In addition, the domain was listed as clean across the checked blacklist and threat-database sources, which reduces the likelihood of currently known phishing or malware activity based on available data.
That said, the website appears to host adult material and the screenshot includes sexually suggestive advertising, so user risk may depend more on content suitability, privacy expectations, and ad exposure than on malware indicators alone. Adult-content sites can sometimes include aggressive ads, trackers, or redirects even when no direct malware is detected in a point-in-time scan.
Based on available scan data, no significant technical threats were detected at the time of this scan, though the site may be unsuitable for minors or users seeking to avoid adult content.
Technical Description
The domain is approximately 5 years old, uses Cloudflare-managed nameservers, and has DNSSEC enabled, which is a positive integrity signal for DNS resolution. The site presented a valid SSL/TLS certificate issued by a mainstream certificate authority, with expiry in July 2026, and the observed hosting and web-serving layer appears to be behind Cloudflare infrastructure in Toronto, Canada.
No blacklist hits were reported at the time of this scan, and the sampled page resources did not show flagged files or iframe activity. The visible challenge-platform URL suggests the site may use anti-bot or traffic-filtering controls through its edge provider, which is common for high-traffic websites.
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