A relic because the era of small-file torrents is fading. With 1Gbps fiber internet common, the "small file" advantage of YTS matters less. Many users now prefer full Remuxes or streaming legal 4K. YTS survives because of habit and data caps in developing nations.
If you find a file matching that keyword on a torrent site, ask yourself: Do I want to watch Footloose, or do I want to own an artifact of digital Robin Hood culture? The 1984 Footloose is a masterpiece of joyous rebellion. Kevin Bacon’s performance is energetic. The soundtrack is immortal. And a proper 4K, 10-bit, 5.1 presentation of that film—from a real BluRay—is a stunning home theater experience. Footloose.1984.2160p.BluRay.x265.10bit.5.1 -YTS...
Instead, use that keyword as a learning tool. Study the nomenclature: 2160p , x265 , 10bit , 5.1 . Then, go buy or rent the legal 4K version. Cue up the warehouse dance. Turn your surround sound to 11. And dance—not because you are sticking it to the man, but because you love cinema. A relic because the era of small-file torrents is fading
After all, as the song says: You gotta cut loose, Footloose, kick off the Sunday shoes. But do it without pirating the Sunday shoes. YTS survives because of habit and data caps
| Service | Resolution | Audio | Special Features | Price | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 2160p native | Dolby Atmos (remastered) | Commentaries, deleted scenes, featurette | $27.99 | | Apple TV / iTunes | 2160p (stream) | Dolby 5.1 | Extras often included | $14.99 (purchase) | | Amazon Prime (rent) | 1080p (only) | Stereo | None | $3.99 rental | | Disney+ (Star/Hulu) | 4K (but compressed) | 5.1 | None | Subscription |