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Dropped Domains, January 31: TotalBombshell.com, WealthIncoming.com, BotCruncher.com and 137 More!

All of the 140 names below have just been deleted and are available for registration at the moment of writing. To provide even more good news, you can get dot coms at just $5.99 over at Unstoppable Domains each Friday by clicking HERE or on the banner above. You can also receive $5.99 registrations and $5.99 transfers each day if you become a Domainer Club member, email growth@unstoppabledomains.com to get in.

They’re losing money on each name they offer at this price, as $5.99 is basically half of the wholesale cost that they themselves have to pay, let’s not even mention employee costs, real estate costs, utilities, processing costs and all that good stuff. Offers like this are *very* rare, never before has a company been THIS consistent on the discount front!

I go through ~20,000 domains each day MANUALLY (AI is remarkably bad at it, as are other automated approaches… if you care about achieving solid STRs and actually making money, that is!) so as to pick a a handful for myself and have done so for several years. If you want to check out my personal portfolio and choose what to buy from a huge list, visit DadDomains.com. FOR THE TIME BEING (!!!), I am selling domains from the DadDomains portfolio at just $20 each if you pay through PayPal or $14 each if you pay through Bitcoin as long as you buy at least ten. There are thousands to choose from, shouldn’t be difficult! To claim domains at these prices, email deals@daddomains.com.

Let’s get right down to business, here are the domains:

TotalBombshell.com – Big personality brand. “Bombshell” signals glamour, confidence, and attention, making it perfect for beauty, fashion, influencer branding, or even a spicy pop-culture newsletter. As a domainer, I like that it’s memorable, has clear vibe, and could convert well for a creator-led brand that wants bold positioning.

WealthIncoming.com – Strong motivational-finance phrasing. It reads like a promise and fits newsletters, finance coaching, budgeting apps, investing content, or even a funnel page for a course. “Incoming” adds urgency and momentum, which is great for marketing.

BotCruncher.com – Excellent tech tool name. It could mean analyzing bots, crushing bot traffic, anti-fraud, automation testing, or data processing. Short, punchy, and very SaaS-friendly. Strong resale potential to cybersecurity or adtech founders.

BotCrunchers.com – The plural suggests a service team, platform, or community. Great for an agency or a suite of tools. Often, plural works better if the buyer wants to be “the people who do the thing.”

FreelanceProsperity.com – High-intent for the creator economy. This is ideal for courses, masterminds, newsletters, and communities helping freelancers earn more and stabilize income. It’s long, but the promise is clear and the market is huge.

CheapSalad.com – Funny and oddly compelling. Could be a budget meal prep brand, a discount salad shop, a recipe site, or even a tongue-in-cheek diet newsletter. Short and memorable, with a “frugal food” niche that performs well.

CheapSalads.com – Plural fits ecommerce and content better – recipes, meal plans, menus, and lists. It feels like a category site, which can be a plus for SEO-based monetization.

BroGardening.com – This is a modern niche gem: gardening content with a casual, male-coded, meme-friendly tone. Could be a YouTube channel, merch, a seed brand, or a community that makes gardening feel less precious and more approachable. Very brandable.

OverallGlasses.com – Strong for eyewear ecommerce, eyewear reviews, or a blog about glasses trends. “Overall” implies comprehensive selection, but it’s slightly generic. Still, it’s clear and commercially aligned.

MaterialImprovements.com – A solid phrase for home improvement, construction, manufacturing, or even personal development framed as “materials” and “upgrades.” Sounds like a real company name, which helps resale.

MassMoneymakers.com – High-energy finance and hustle branding. It could fit a newsletter, affiliate site, or community about making money at scale. Slightly hype-y, but that’s often the point in this niche.

HornyHotel.comSKIPPED (explicit sexual content – I can’t help market or position this as an investment domain).

UniversityPrints.com – Great for campus merch, print-on-demand, posters, graduation prints, alumni gifts, or a marketplace for university-themed artwork. Clear ecommerce angle and a big buyer pool.

DoctorCrash.com – Strong for a medical education “crash course” brand or an emergency medicine content channel, but it can also read like malpractice or accidents. As a domainer, I’d pitch it as “crash course” with careful branding to avoid negative connotations.

FantasticFindings.com – Great for discovery content: deals, products, travel, research, or curiosities. “Findings” implies curation and exploration, which is ideal for newsletters and affiliate-driven blogs.

MaltaPharmaceuticals.com – Very specific geography + industry. This could appeal to a company in Malta’s pharma space, a directory, or a B2B sourcing portal. Niche but potentially valuable due to commercial seriousness.

JealousBro.com – Meme-ready and character-like. Could be a humor persona, a relationship commentary channel, or a satirical brand about envy and masculinity. Niche but memorable.

ConnectingStyle.com – Fashion and networking crossover – styling that connects people, or connecting your personal style with your identity. It’s a bit abstract, but it sounds polished and could fit a stylist, brand consultant, or content platform.

WatermasterCredit.com – Feels like a finance brand but with a strange “watermaster” prefix. Could be tied to agriculture credit, maritime finance, or a specific company name. As an investor, I’d flag this as a “needs a very specific buyer” domain.

MissBlank.com – Short, flexible persona branding. “Miss Blank” could be a template, a character, a mystery brand, or a creator identity. The ambiguity is the asset, but it also means resale depends on the right buyer’s imagination.

SocialNegotiations.com – Great for interpersonal skills content, negotiation coaching, sales training, and career development. The phrase is clear, and negotiation is a high-value niche.

ZealousBrigade.com – Strong identity and community vibe. Could be gaming clans, activism groups, fitness communities, or a bold creator collective. “Brigade” adds unity and action.

SafeUnsubscribing.com – Highly practical, very modern. Email overload and unsubscribe scams are real issues, and this domain fits a tool, guide site, or browser extension that helps users unsubscribe safely. Strong utilitarian resale value.

RoommateScout.com – Excellent marketplace brand. Short, clear, and high-demand niche. Perfect for finding roommates, roommate verification, sublets, and shared housing communities. Strong resale potential.

StresslessTowing.com – Great local service branding. Towing is a stressful event, so promising “stressless” is a strong differentiator. Very sellable to a towing company or lead-gen site.

RomanticTemptations.com – Romance content, gift guides, date night products, and couples experiences fit well. It’s suggestive but not explicit, making it more brand-safe than many romance domains.

ContinuedMomentum.com – Coaching and productivity branding that implies sustained progress. Great for business consulting, habit-building programs, or leadership training.

EpicureDesigns.com – “Epicure” signals gourmet taste and refined lifestyle. Great for restaurant interior design, food branding, luxury packaging, or a design studio focused on high-end culinary aesthetics.

AcademyAdvertising.com – Professional and direct. Could be a training platform teaching advertising, a marketing agency that feels educational, or a resource hub for ad practitioners.

AncientParty.com – Fun and quirky. Could be themed events, historical reenactment communities, mythology parties, or a comedic brand. The contrast of “ancient” and “party” is memorable.

NerdEnterprise.com – Strong for a tech consultancy, creator brand, or nerd-culture business community. “Enterprise” adds seriousness, making it suitable for B2B.

LittleScrap.com – Cute and crafty. Great for scrapbooking, DIY crafts, small-batch materials, or a creative blog. Short and brandable.

SurfingIt.com – Casual and broad. Could be surf culture, browsing the web, or “surfing” trends. Slightly generic, but short and easy to remember.

DecodedHosting.com – Excellent for a hosting review site or a hosting brand focused on transparency and education. “Decoded” implies you simplify complexity, which is exactly what hosting consumers want.

GoldenWorkshops.com – Premium training and events branding. Could be crafts, business workshops, leadership training, or maker sessions. “Golden” implies top-tier quality.

RegalExcellence.com – Very premium tone. Could fit luxury consulting, coaching, high-end services, or even a brand positioning itself as elite.

IstanbulChannel.com – Great for a media brand focused on Istanbul – travel, culture, news, lifestyle, and expat life. “Channel” makes it naturally video and social-media ready.

MegaMean.com – Short, edgy, and memorable. Could be a gaming persona, a humor brand, or a product name. It’s a vibe domain, and vibe domains sell when the vibe matches a buyer’s concept.

SavingsTrail.com – Nice metaphor for personal finance: a trail of savings goals and steps. Great for budgeting apps, coupon sites, travel savings, or financial coaching.

DailyStadium.com – Sports media branding. Could be a daily sports newsletter, match recaps, stadium reviews, or fan content. “Daily” supports subscription and habit.

GreekThinkers.com – Great for philosophy, history, education, and cultural content. Could be a blog, course site, podcast, or a brand selling philosophy-themed merch.

AsiaUnexplored.com – Travel and discovery branding that suggests hidden destinations and lesser-known experiences. Great for a blog, tour operator, or documentary channel.

HighClassService.com – Simple and premium. Could fit concierge services, luxury customer support, high-end home services, or a brand promising white-glove treatment.

DigitalGraveyards.com – Fantastic concept for tech commentary, startup postmortems, dead apps, abandoned websites, and internet history. Great for a newsletter or YouTube channel. Highly memorable.

BalancingAmbitions.com – Self-improvement and career content aimed at high-achievers. Great for burnout prevention coaching, productivity, and work-life integration.

BeingSteady.com – Calm, minimalist personal development branding. Fits mental health, financial stability coaching, sobriety journeys, or mindfulness content. Short and reassuring.

RomanticWhispers.com – Soft romance branding for content, poetry, audiobooks, gift guides, or couples wellness. Gentle and brand-safe.

CultivationWorld.com – Broad and agricultural, but could also fit personal cultivation – skills, mindset, wellness. “World” implies a hub or directory, which helps.

DesirableDrones.com – Great ecommerce and review niche. Drones are a big market, and “desirable” implies curated top picks. Could be affiliate-heavy and monetizable.

OutputOriented.com – Strong B2B productivity and operations branding. Great for consultants, performance coaching, OKR tooling, and execution-focused teams.

MaterialDisclosure.com – This reads like finance and compliance language, which could be excellent for legal, IR, and corporate disclosure tools. It’s serious and professional.

BestMultiple.com – Vague and awkward. Could mean multiple-choice test prep, multiple income streams, or multiple offers. As an investor, I’d mark it as hard to pitch without a clear buyer story.

ConsultantSherpas.com – Clever and memorable. Sherpas guide you up difficult mountains, which maps perfectly to consultants guiding businesses through challenges. Great for an agency, consulting collective, or coaching brand.

AffordableBookings.com – Strong travel and reservation niche. Perfect for booking deals, hotel and flight comparisons, local services booking, or an affiliate travel site.

GameSummaries.com – Highly practical for sports, esports, and gaming. Summaries and recaps are evergreen. Great for a content site, newsletter, or app.

FirstAccesses.com – Slightly awkward pluralization, but it implies early access, exclusive entry, and first looks. Could fit product launches, memberships, events, or VIP deals.

CareerPurposes.com – Purpose-driven career coaching brand. Great for people searching for meaning in work, career changes, and values-based job hunting.

InfoBlobs.com – Fun, internet-native, and perfect for bite-sized information content. Great for newsletters, trivia, explainers, or an app that serves info chunks.

SomewhatModest.com – Quirky and self-aware, good for fashion, lifestyle, personal branding, or a humor newsletter. The hedged tone can be charming in modern branding.

VerifiedJournal.com – Strong for journalism, fact-checked reporting, or a verified personal journal product. “Verified” implies trust and credibility, which sells.

SuccessMaestros.com – Coaching collective vibe. “Maestros” implies expertise and guidance. Great for a mastermind group or training organization.

SuperstarsWorldwide.com’ – Looks like it includes a stray apostrophe at the end. Ignoring that, the domain concept is big, global, and entertainment-heavy. Great for talent agencies, influencer directories, sports coverage, or celebrity media. Long, but clear.

AnonymitySurfer.com – Privacy and internet culture branding. Could be a VPN review site, privacy education newsletter, or a persona for someone exploring anonymity online. Sensitive niche but strong demand.

YuppieBoy.com – Character brand with retro economic vibes. Could be satire, fashion persona, or a lifestyle brand leaning into urban professional stereotypes.

UptownSuccess.com – Premium urban ambition branding. Great for career coaching, luxury lifestyle content, or a brand positioning success as polished and metropolitan.

SalesTruths.com – Excellent B2B content brand for sales principles, debunking myths, and training. Strong newsletter and course potential.

UniqueImprint.com – Great for branding and printing: custom merch, promotional products, print-on-demand. “Imprint” is an industry term, and “unique” adds differentiation.

JuniorFashionistas.com – Strong for kids fashion content, youth styling, parenting shopping guides, or ecommerce. Clear niche and easy to monetize.

FullCalculator.com – Utility vibe, could be a calculator hub, finance calculators, business calculators, or a tool site. Slightly generic, but functional domains can earn.

NeighborhoodEspresso.com – Lovely local cafe branding, or a community coffee guide. Very warm and “local-first” which is trendy. Great for a real shop or a directory.

PortugalTradition.com – Great for culture, travel, crafts, and heritage products. Could be content or ecommerce selling traditional Portuguese goods. Clear positioning.

MassiveProd.com – Sounds like “production” shortened, which can be good for a production company, music producer brand, or manufacturing concept. Slightly ambiguous but short.

TrueTranscription.com – Strong for transcription services, AI transcription tools, and accessibility. “True” implies accuracy, which is the key selling point.

RelentlessCopywriter.com – Excellent personal brand domain. Copywriters love strong identity statements, and “relentless” signals hustle and persistence. Great for a high-ticket freelancer.

FinanceRag.com – Edgy financial media brand. “Rag” implies a scrappy newspaper, which can be charming if positioned as blunt and honest. Might not suit corporate buyers but great for a newsletter persona.

TheLashers.com – Could be beauty (lash extensions) or something else. For beauty, it’s strong brand potential: salon, product line, training. Needs a clear brand story.

HumorDays.com – Simple, cheerful content brand for daily humor, jokes, memes, and light entertainment. “Days” suggests a recurring series.

IslamicDad.com – Clear niche identity for fatherhood content within Islamic culture and values. Could be parenting advice, community resources, and family lifestyle. Strong targeted audience with community resonance.

EmpireUnderearth.com – Epic fantasy branding for fiction, games, or worldbuilding. The imagery is rich and cinematic. Great for creative buyers.

ThoughtfulLovers.com – Romance and relationship education branding with a mature tone. Suggests intentionality and care, good for couples content and gift guides.

YesPromoting.com – Slightly awkward phrasing, but it implies a positive stance on promotion and marketing. Could be a marketing blog or a consultancy that focuses on promotion as a craft.

UniversityPageant.com – Very specific niche. Could be a platform for campus pageants, scholarship pageants, events, and media coverage. Niche but clear.

RetirementFame.com – Interesting concept: becoming known or influential after retirement. Could be a lifestyle and personal branding niche for older creators, entrepreneurs, or community leaders.

BookkeepingWanted.com – High-intent lead-gen style domain. Perfect for matching businesses with bookkeepers, job listings, or a service agency. Clear and monetizable.

UnfairThings.com – Broad, opinionated, and content-friendly. Could be a social commentary site, a humor blog, or a niche advocacy brand. The vagueness can be an asset for a creator.

InfluenceUnveiled.com – Great for marketing, psychology, persuasion analysis, and influencer economy commentary. “Unveiled” implies behind-the-scenes, which sells.

UnderdogLearning.com – Fantastic education brand aimed at struggling students, second-chance learners, or people who feel behind. Very positive and mission-driven.

JobsUpClose.com – Great for job reviews, day-in-the-life content, career exploration videos, and job shadowing resources. “Up close” implies realism and detail.

MassiveHooters.com – This is likely to be interpreted as explicit or as referencing an existing brand, which makes it risky. I can’t help market sexually suggestive domains, so SKIPPED.

BitcoinStandup.com – Fun crypto media niche – standup comedy about bitcoin, or a “stand up for Bitcoin” advocacy brand. Either way it’s memorable and fits the crypto culture.

ReheatingFood.com – Very practical. Could be a cooking tips site, microwave guides, meal prep content, or appliance reviews. Simple, high-search-intent household topic.

UnlimitedRanking.com – SEO and competitive gaming vibes. Ranking is central in search, marketplaces, and games, so this could be a marketing tool brand or a gaming stats platform.

HobbyExploring.com – Great for hobby discovery content, hobby subscription boxes, or a platform that helps people find new interests. Warm and broad.

EuphoricJourney.com – Wellness, travel, and self-improvement branding. Strong emotional promise. Could fit retreats, coaching, or inspirational media.

RefreshedBooks.com – Great for book summaries, revamped editions, used books rebranded, or “refresh your reading habit” content. Clean and warm.

BestDemands.com – Awkward phrase. Could be procurement, staffing, or negotiations, but it’s not immediately clear. As an investor, I’d treat it as lower priority without a specific buyer.

BeginningCamping.com – Excellent beginner niche for outdoor content. Camping beginners need gear lists, guides, and courses, which monetize well through affiliate links.

BitcoinHeiress.com – Strong persona brand for a female crypto influencer, a book title, or a media project. Niche but memorable, and crypto audiences love character brands.

FallArc.com – Short and abstract, could be a story arc name, a product name, or a seasonal brand. Its value depends entirely on a buyer wanting the vibe.

LimitlessPlanning.com – Great for productivity, event planning, financial planning, or strategic planning consulting. “Limitless” is a strong aspirational word in planning services.

SustainableDisruptions.com – Modern business buzzword combo that fits climate tech, ethical innovation, and sustainability consulting. Long, but conceptually on-trend.

AutoCoworker.com – Could be a tool that automates tasks as your “coworker,” or something automotive. The best use is AI assistant branding: your automated coworker. Interesting and modern.

ZenithWarriors.com – Strong heroic branding for gaming clans, sports teams, or a motivational community. Zenith implies peak, which fits performance niches.

ElderRat.com – Weird and memorable, but not broadly appealing. Could be a character brand, a fantasy persona, or indie art. Resale is niche.

AbstractCommunity.com – Broad and concept-heavy. Could fit modern art communities, academic groups, or a thinky social platform. Not the easiest pitch, but it sounds serious and modern.

JollyHelpers.com – Warm, friendly, and service-ready. Could be a local services marketplace, a caregiving platform, or a community volunteer brand. Great for trust-based niches.

LedgerWarrior.com – Strong fintech and accounting vibe. “Ledger” signals finance, “warrior” signals hustle. Great for crypto accounting tools, bookkeeping training, or a finance persona.

DatingRag.com – The word “rag” makes it edgy and tabloid-like. Could be a humorous dating news site, but it may feel low-class to some buyers. Niche but memorable.

OnlyDaters.com – Clear dating community brand. “Only” suggests exclusivity, like a members-only vibe. Good for a niche dating app or subscription community.

DigitalEditorials.com – Great for online opinion writing, editorial publishing, a commentary network, or a modern magazine brand. Clean and professional.

PurposefullyGrowing.com – Wellness and business coaching branding. Suggests intentional progress, which is a strong promise for self-improvement markets.

BalkanCollections.com – Great for ecommerce and cultural curation of Balkan goods, crafts, antiques, or travel content. Geographic niche with strong identity.

ExtraVideography.com – Slightly awkward, but it signals premium videography services or extra content production. Could work for a video agency with a playful tone.

BadFounders.com – Fantastic for startup critique content, postmortems, and founder lessons. Could be a newsletter, podcast, or community sharing cautionary tales. Strong hook.

MarriageParade.com – A celebratory, event-like phrase. Could be wedding content, relationship milestones, or even a playful brand around marriages. Slightly unusual but memorable.

SoulInspiring.com – Spiritual and motivational branding. Great for faith content, inspirational media, coaching, and wellness.

StartBadminton.com – Very practical sports beginner niche. Great for coaching, local clubs, gear guides, and training content. “Start” signals beginner-friendly, which is a strong market.

AnonymitySafe.com – Privacy-first branding, clearly aimed at secure browsing, anonymous communication, and online safety. Great for a VPN review site, privacy education brand, or secure tools.

PaymentRemittances.com – Very finance and fintech B2B. Remittances are a huge global market. This could fit a payments startup, an educational portal, or a comparison site.

DailyInvoicing.com – Great for invoicing SaaS, templates, freelancer finance content, and small business accounting. “Daily” implies habit and recurring engagement.

FishingCheap.com – Awkward grammar, but the intent is clear: cheap fishing gear, budget fishing tips. Could be an affiliate niche site.

TopDesigned.com – Could fit design portfolios, curated design products, or a design agency. Slightly awkward past participle feel, but still brandable.

NeckGuardian.com – Good for posture products, travel pillows, neck braces, physiotherapy products, or safety gear. Strong product brand potential.

InfamousBoy.com – Persona branding, edgy and story-like. Could be a musician, influencer, character brand, or fiction project.

LimitlessReporting.com – Strong for business intelligence, analytics dashboards, compliance reporting, or reporting-as-a-service SaaS. “Limitless” adds ambition.

RusticDad.com – Wonderful niche identity for dad content around woodworking, grilling, outdoors, and cabin aesthetics. Great for merch, YouTube, and lifestyle content.

ExpeditedDiscounts.com – Deals brand with urgency. “Expedited” suggests fast savings. Slightly unusual pairing but could work for a coupon site or ecommerce promo hub.

PowerfulPropulsion.com – Industrial and engineering vibe. Could fit aerospace, automotive performance, energy tech, or a science media brand. Long but strong.

SusInvesting.com – This reads like “suspicious investing” or “sus” slang. It could be a satirical finance brand calling out scams. Clever if that’s the intent, but risky for mainstream finance buyers.

OfflineReset.com – Excellent modern digital wellness and detox branding. Perfect for retreats, apps that limit screen time, mindfulness programs, or content encouraging breaks from the internet.

ForgetAnxiety.com – Strong mental wellness promise, though the phrasing is a bit absolute. Could be a content site, coaching brand, or product funnel for stress reduction. Needs careful messaging to avoid unrealistic claims.

SkepticalBrands.com – Great for marketing critique, brand analysis, consumer advocacy, and honest product reviews. “Skeptical” is a strong differentiator in a world of hype.

InfluentialChristian.com – Clear niche personal brand or media brand aimed at Christian leadership and influence. Strong community market.

InfluentialChristians.com – Plural suggests a directory, community, or publication featuring Christian leaders. Often more scalable than the singular.

StrongReply.com – Great communications and customer support branding. Could be an email template tool, negotiation coaching, PR response training, or a productivity app.

MyScrappy.com – Short and playful. Could be a personal brand, a scrapbooking site, a startup vibe, or a DIY community. The “My” makes it personal and friendly.

BullishGuardian.com – Finance brand with protection and optimism. “Bullish” implies positive market stance, “guardian” implies safety. Great for investing newsletters, risk-managed portfolios, or crypto security.

PopDrain.com – Very ambiguous. Could be plumbing, a music term, or a novelty product. Short, but it needs a clearer buyer story to have strong resale value.

SellersRepublic.com – Strong marketplace and ecommerce community branding. “Republic” implies a community of sellers, perfect for Amazon sellers, Etsy sellers, resellers, and ecommerce education platforms.


Remember: you can get dot coms at just $5.99 over at Unstoppable Domains each Friday by clicking HERE or on the banner above. They’re losing money on each name they offer at this price, as $5.99 is basically half of the wholesale cost that they themselves have to pay. Offers like this are *very* rare!

Also worth remembering: they are offering $5.99 registrations and transfers each day if you are a member of their Domainer Club, plus potentially other perks depending on how large of a portfolio you have. If you want to get in, send them an email at growth@unstoppabledomains.com and they will take good care of you.

Finally, keep in mind that I go through ~20,000 domains each day MANUALLY (AI is remarkably bad at it, as are other automated approaches… if you care about achieving solid STRs and actually making money, that is!) so as to pick a a handful for myself and have done so for several years. If you want to check out my personal portfolio and choose what to buy from a huge list, visit DadDomains.com. FOR THE TIME BEING (!!!), I am selling domains from the DadDomains portfolio at just $20 each if you pay through PayPal or $14 each if you pay through Bitcoin as long as you buy at least ten. There are thousands to choose from, shouldn’t be difficult! To claim domains at these prices, email deals@daddomains.com.

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