r/piracy megathrad

R/piracy — Megathrad |best|

Opening the r/piracy Megathread (which is constantly updated, with versions often referred to by date, e.g., "Megathread v.2025") is akin to looking at a hand-drawn map of a besieged city. It is organized with obsessive, almost academic rigor. The typical sections include:

For a generation raised on streaming service fragmentation—where Netflix loses The Office to Peacock, and HBO Max removes Westworld for a tax write-off—the Megathread is a practical manifesto. It says: The corporations do not care about your access to culture. They care about your subscription. If you want a digital library that cannot be revoked, you must build it yourself, and you must do it safely. r/piracy megathrad

r/piracy is a subreddit focused on the discussion of piracy in its various forms, including but not limited to: It says: The corporations do not care about

Reddit has historically looked the other way, likely because the Megathread serves a useful purpose: it contains the piracy discussion. Without it, r/piracy would be a chaotic flood of direct link requests, which would invite immediate legal action. By keeping the community focused on the Megathread, Reddit admins can argue they are providing "information" rather than "infringing material." r/piracy is a subreddit focused on the discussion

This balance is fragile. Every few months, a major subreddit ban (e.g., r/ChapoTrapHouse or r/WatchRedditDie) sends a chill through the piracy community. The Megathread is frequently archived (locked) and re-posted to prevent it from being a static target. Users are taught to never link directly to the Megathread on other platforms, using codes like "r/piracy's FMHY (Free Media Heck Yeah)" or "the wiki" to evade automated takedown bots.

Ultimately, the r/piracy Megathread is a profoundly optimistic document. It argues that information wants to be free, but that freedom requires rigorous maintenance. It inverts the traditional narrative of piracy as chaotic, lazy, or criminal. Instead, it presents piracy as a discipline.