Emule Server List Here

As of late 2024, the number of public eD2k servers has dwindled. Ten years ago, lists contained 500+ servers. Today, a healthy list has 40–60. The major survivors include:

The trend is toward smaller, private, and invite-only server lists used by niche communities (e.g., eMule lovers of classical music, vintage software, academic texts). For the casual user, the public Emule server list is slowly dying, but Kad is stepping up.

Our recommendation: Download a final server list in 2024, then focus on bootstrapping Kad via known nodes (nodes.dat). Learn to use Kad’s global search and source exchange. The server list is now a legacy handshake, not a lifestyle. Emule Server List


Anti-P2P organizations and copyright trolls run "fake" servers. They log your IP address, the files you search for, and the files you download. How to spot them:

Cause: You are using a list from 2015. Solution: Delete the entire list (Ctrl+A, Delete). Paste one of the 2024 URLs from Part 3 into the "Update Server.met from URL" field and hit "Update." As of late 2024, the number of public


Even with trusted lists, bad servers occasionally slip in. You must manually filter your list to stay safe.


This is the core of your search. The internet is littered with obsolete lists from 2012. Do not use them. Here are the currently active sources for an updated Emule server list: The trend is toward smaller, private, and invite-only

Some advanced users prefer addresses.dat files. You can find these on forums like: