Search By Partial Torrent Filename
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Would it be nice to search torrent by a part of the torrent filename?
E.g. Search "hunky_arthur" shows no torrent, even tho the torrent "BIG Chaturbaters Collection 144" contains multiple files with "hunky_arthur". For example: hunky_arthur_2023-01-06_11-50 cum facial.mp4
It would be such a life saver to find content, if the search engine could support search by torrent filename substring.
Although, it could be difficult to implement this function given the huge number of filenames. It would be a great feature even if such search only support uncommon keywords, like names with underscores, as to support all keywords like "an", "andy", etc
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@Yuanpiepie I think you will find what you want by clicking on the "Torrent Description" box.
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@lololulu19 That didnt work. "Torrent Description" means search in the description section of the torrent, not in the torrent filename
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yeah i'd like to have this feature too
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@Yuanpiepie Yes.. but as you mentioned.. collections can have hundreds of videos and performers. Obviously the torrent filename can't possibly contain the information that you are searching for - so searching the "Torrent Description" is your best bet.
Personally, I almost never download collections anymore mainly BECAUSE of what you mentioned.. they are so difficult to search! While that collection might have a great video in it. If that video is buried in a subdirectly with the filename 18412451qz87j2.mp4... the odds of ever finding that video in your own collection is slim. Likewise, thumbnails that contain more than 4x3 (12 images) are fairly useless. A lot of people are stuffing microfilm sized images with 64 images per thumbnail in the picture! Totally worthless!
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@Yuanpiepie Might I humbly suggest you brush up on searching using wildcards? See if you can spor what I did here...
https://www.gaytor.rent/browse.php?c62=1&c29=1&c46=1&c30=1&c43=1&c19=1&c17=1&c59=1&c44=1&c50=1&c9=1&c7=1&c48=1&c5=1&c67=1&c66=1&c34=1&c68=1&c27=1&c32=1&c63=1&c12=1&c33=1&c53=1&c57=1&c35=1&c36=1&c58=1&c37=1&c54=1&c38=1&c39=1&c56=1&c40=1&c61=1&c60=1&c45=1&c47=1&c1=1&c41=1&c42=1&c51=1&c65=1&c28=1&search=hunky_arthur*&incldead=0&inname=1&indesc=1&infn=1&orderby=added&sort=desc -
@frostycab This is ingenious. How did you figure it out?
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@Yuanpiepie Look up wildcards in searches. They've been around since the internet as we know it was born. A "*" basically stands for any number of other characters in a string. A "?" represents a single character. Using quotes searches for a specific string rather than each of the individual words. They don't all work on all sites, but the * is pretty universal.
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@Yuanpiepie So in your example, searching for hunky_arthur would only return that exact match. By changing it to hunky_arthur* you get everything that begins with hunky_arthur even if it has other characters at the end. You could go further by trying hunky_arthur to allow for matches that perhaps start with [OF]hunky_arthur, or hunky*arthur if you were unsure about the underscore in the middle.
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@Yuanpiepie Sorry, the site formatting system changed my last message a bit. The bit in italics should read hunky_arthur with an asterisk at the beginning and end.
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@frostycab Thank you for your detailed response. Sorry for not replying sooner. You are the GOAT. This search trick is a good addition under my belt.