A chronological list of every application, game, and film that "hit" the scene during that week.
This specific keyword refers to a recurring digital distribution report commonly found in "The Scene"—the underground network of release groups that share cracked software, media, and digital content. The "0-day and Hitlist Week" report serves as a summary of the most significant "0-day" (newly released software/content) and high-priority "Hitlist" items distributed during a specific week, in this case, the week of July 17, 2024. 0-day and Hitlist Week -07-17-2024- Report Torr...
For those looking to manage these types of releases, tools like or Radarr are often used to automatically track and organize the content mentioned in these weekly hitlists. A chronological list of every application, game, and
In the context of private trackers and scene releases, these terms have specific meanings: For those looking to manage these types of
This represents a curated list of "must-have" or highly anticipated releases that the community has been tracking. If a major game or a high-end creative suite (like Adobe or Autodesk products) is "cracked" and released, it earns a spot on the hitlist.
Reports from this period often emphasize the risks of "0-day" vulnerabilities—not just the releases themselves, but the security flaws being exploited in the software they are cracking.
While these reports eventually leak to public trackers, they are originally meant for private, high-tier trackers like IPTorrents or TorrentLeech .