Skip to Content

All The Fallen Booru May 2026

A notable proportion of ATF‑Booru’s top‑viewed images (≈ 18 %) are later reposted on mainstream social media, often with credit to the original uploader. This diffusion amplifies the site’s cultural footprint while also raising attribution challenges.


Strictly speaking, "All the Fallen Booru" is not a single website. It is a colloquialism, a community-driven concept that refers to the collective repository of backup data, JSON dumps, and metadata salvaged from defunct booru-style imageboards. all the fallen booru

The term gained traction around 2019–2021 when several major boorus (including the original Sankaku Channel image hosting and Idol Complex) collapsed under the weight of DMCA notices or financial insolvency. Archival groups on platforms like ArchiveTeam and Reddit’s r/DataHoarder began using the phrase to tag torrents containing millions of lost images. Strictly speaking, "All the Fallen Booru" is not

Key characteristics of the "Fallen Booru" archive: This study seeks to answer the following questions:

| Feature | Danbooru | e621 | Fallen Booru | |----------|----------|------|--------------| | Loli/Shota | Banned | Banned | Allowed | | Guro | Banned (most) | Banned | Allowed | | Furry cub | N/A | Banned | Allowed (Fallen Furs) | | Tag strictness | Very high | High | Medium (user-defined) | | Uptime | 99.9% | 99.9% | Unstable (50–80%) | | Legal risk for user | Low | Low | Medium–High | | Artist verification | Yes (Pixiv/Twitter) | Yes | Rare (anonymous upload) |


This study seeks to answer the following questions:


Through collaborative tagging, a distinct visual lexicon has emerged—e.g., recurring motifs of shattered crowns, wilted flowers, and muted color palettes. These motifs have been adopted by external creators on platforms such as Twitter and Pixiv.