No, I wont name the specific title. I don't want to break Rule 3. But I do want to understand why a movie or show can be so hard to find, because maybe that will lead me to understanding how to find things.
I am surprised how hard it is to find some titles. Maybe it's because the one I'm thinking of is an old title, 60s or 70s era. But it's extremely popular, even today. It's been on hopping around streaming services. One would think it would be readily available on the high seas too. I don't really know how one creates a torrent but I'm assuming anything that can be streamed can be captured. I guess maybe it's just not as popular as I think?
A lot of older movies are available for free on ad based second tier streaming services. I would think that makes them much lower of a priority for a lot of people. No one's going to keep a torrent going in the background 24 hours a day for a movie from 1968 that two people a year actually come looking for
On private trackers we can request stuff and others will have a look if they have it or if they can get it on their trackers.
Unfortunately it's difficult to upload stuff on many trackers but it's easier on quality trackers. The source is even open source so I do not understand why many trackers still have a bad website.
How long are you searching for? Sometimes it just takes time until someone uploads it. That's the beauty of servarr. You request it and some day it'll pop up.
Hmm maybe usnig servarr is the way to go. I couldn't really figure out how I was supposed to configure it. Ideally I would just wanna use a VPN, TPB, and qBit and not fiddle around with any additional programs. It's already confusing enough! But I guess servarr is something I can incorporate into qBit?
+1 servarr
It took me a while to navigate the (high) sea of information but eventually I got a setup I like. I started, like you say, just running qBit but found the search results limited and tedious to review manually. Get started with Prowlarr if nothing else. No need to jump in the deep end with everything all at once but once you see how it works you can add other components later.
You can easily find working trackers by looking into the list of trackers that prowlarr provides. If a tracker isn't on that list, you don't want to get into it.
You search for your language and the desired content and then you open 10 tabs for 10 trackers. Some can be closed directly because there are no open registrstions. For the other 5 you send a text about yourself and your torrent experience and behavior. The content you are looking for, the quality and what you can provide. Your setup, etc. Copy paste the text to those 5 and you'll get invited to at least 3 of them.
You can also just start out with one. It doesn't need to be your desired or final tracker. It needs time to understand torrenting anyway. Just being on one is a good start. Setting up servarr takes time as well. Use 1337x.to and just look for your first tracker.