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    1. Grif of Hearts 12 yrs ago
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I'm remaking Genesis. Now with 100% more rules that make sense!

> Evolve your species to become stronger.
> Evolutions require a certain amount of energy per turn to maintain.
> More or stronger evolutions require more energy than fewer or weaker ones.
> Regenerate energy by feeding or by evolving new ways to regenerate energy.
> Try not to get eaten by the wildlife or other players.
> Enjoy watching your Cthulhu rip-off take over the world.

Sound simple enough? Good. Like last time you'll be starting in an ocean environment (it's simple and allows for more craziness) but this time you'll be starting as a more developed species, this time with a mouth (which deals two HP damage in bites), digestive system, and actually functioning eyes. You'll also get to choose between playing as a vertebrate or an invertebrate, both of which can be seen in the picture at the top of this thread. The vertebrate will gain "Speed +1" as a starting bonus but the invertebrate will gain "Armour +1" as a starting bonus, both of which should be pretty self-explanatory. Any evolutions from that point on depend on what you feel would benefit you most (or what you think would be the funniest).

Your species will start with a maximum health of 10 and an energy of 10. Both starting variants will lose 1 energy per turn on account of their starting bonuses. If your energy reaches 0 then you start to lose health at the same rate you'd lose energy. However, you can eat food to regenerate energy (there are other methods, usually involving specialised evolutions) and you have no limit to the maximum amount of energy you can store, so go wild on the noms! Certain types of food grant you more energy, so hunting rarer or larger prey may prove beneficial. If your energy is higher than your current health then you will begin to regenerate health at a steady rate (about half of the amount of energy you have above your current HP) which means you won't be permanently cursed with low HP after one fight.

If you die I'll respawn you... missing one or two evolutions, of course.

As said, the more evolutions you have the higher your energy cost per turn will be, meaning you'll have to balance cool evolutions against how many evolutions you can actually sustain. You do have the ability to abandon evolutions if you wish, which'll reduce the energy cost per turn, but you'll lose some of the cool evolutions you used to have! You can dispose of evolutions in a single turn, but gaining evolutions may take several

Speaking of which, whenever you want to evolve, post your idea for an evolution and I'll give you an energy cost and how many turns it'll take for the evolution to manifest. You can then choose to go through with the evolution or to opt for something else in the next turn. You can begin the process of evolution and move in the same turn.

That everything you need to know? Feel free to ask any questions you might have and I'll try to answer them to the best of my ability.

Sign-up Sheet

Species name: Go wild on this one~
Species colours: Pick a colour, a pattern, or even a small physical change to the basic model and I'll make sure your species has it. This can be changed later for no cost.
Species origin: Invertebrate or vertebrate as previously mentioned.

Players



























Game

Round 1
Round 2
Round 3
Decent female characters are relatively easy to find. You might have to wade through a lot of sexualised pictures to get a decent one but at least they exist. Ever try looking for decent pictures of male characters in a modern setting? I'm convinced that there are a grand total of three pictures on the internet that fit that criteria.
Daphne’s metal and leather boots clanked against the stone bricks of the Silver Leaves bastion as she walked through its gates, and she was filled with the same sense of enthusiastic monotony that had become all too familiar to her. She passed a few other members of the mercenary group, fighters and caretakers alike, as they meandered about in the early hours of the morning. She paid them little mind and they seemed to do the same, more concerned with committing themselves to their early morning rituals than bothering the lone woman that had only just arrived. She did not politely to a guardsman as she passed and she did the same, if only to be courteous.

She pulled her cloak around her a little tighter as she walked with one hand, and then used the other to rummage through her satchel quickly. Pulling out what little stale bread she had stuffed in her pockets she began to chew on it slowly as she made her way towards the mess hall, silently wishing that they had something more flavoursome on offer for her breakfast.

The mess hall was not difficult to find, having tread the route towards it a thousand times before. She followed her nose, the smell of wine and food starting to fill the air as breakfast was prepared for the dozens of mercenaries that would soon flood the doors. Even now it smelled divine. She pushed open a side-door into the mess hall and stepped inside, greeted by the sight of a few Silver Leaves mercenaries who had woken up early enough to get first pickings at breakfast. Daphne joined them shortly after gathering some soft bread, cheese, and meat to eat, sitting by a pair of dwarven brothers who were downing their second glass of beer this morning.

“Ah, Daph’,” said one of the dwarves. He was older than the other, with a thick blond beard that was braided quite delicately. His nose was large and his eyes were a steely grey, covered by a small pair of spectacles. “Good ta’ see ya’. Sleep well?”

“Not particularly,” she replied, kicking her legs up onto the table in which they ate. She felt a slight sting run up her side, reminding her of the reason why she hadn’t slept well. “Fresh injuries keeping me awake again… I don’t think I sealed the tissue right. Blasted magic.”

The younger dwarf spoke next, running a few fingers through his longer but less well managed beard. “Das’ what’cha get when ya’ dabble in necromancy, gal. A whole bunch of nasty side-effects ya’ never wanted nor needed! You should go see on of tha’ healers right away and get it looked at.”

The woman rolled her eyes at the nag, having heard it all a dozen times before. The Silver Leaves were more tolerable of necromancy than most, acknowledging its tactical use and practicality, but Daphne was no stranger to being criticised for her craft. While the eldest brother, Asmund, had long accepted the usefulness of necromancy in the Silver Leaves organisation and was perfectly happy to let Daphne practice it, Ake had never taken to it and insisted on reminding the woman of that fact.

“I’ll be fine,” she said, rubbing the position of the wound through the fabric of her clothes. “They’re always like this for a day or two.”

Ake did not seem too impressed but Daphne didn’t care, more concerned with the plate of food that rested on her lap which she picked from mindlessly as she spoke with the two dwarven men for a while longer, recounting the past few days as she had not seen either of them in some time. Ake and Asmund told her of a few contracts they had undertaken and she told them of the same, but each one of her exploits paled in comparison to those of the brothers. Daphne had no idea if any of their stories were even truthful but she enjoyed them none the less, even when they claimed to have slain a dragon with nothing more than a knife and a fork between them.

Slowly the mess hall filled up with all sorts of faces, many of which Daphne recognised. They eagerly dug into their breakfast and made themselves merry before they faced the trails of the day which would arrive soon. Two faces of note were Linwë and Iano, two fellow fighters and mercenaries. Daphne nodded a welcome to them both as they entered, still keeping one ear to the conversation as Ake recounted the time he threw an axe one hundred feet, made it ricochet off the wall of a church, only for it to embed itself in his bounty’s skull.
Kaga said
I originally read the title as "Orangutans are learning to Spanish" - as in, they were learning to speak the language or something.I think that would be far more interesting.


I'd be lying if I said I didn't do the same thing.
Walter was not entirely sure how long he had expected the ship to be travelling for but six hours was far longer than he had thought it would take. His perception had been corrupted by the media it seemed, all too used to seeing films and games portray ships that could cross the stars from one side of the galaxy to the other in the space of a few seconds. Clearly in all of Zakarr’s magnificence he could not afford a ship that could do anything remotely like that. The trip was exhausting, the kind that could wear out even the most patient of men, and Walter felt even worse as he struggled to stomach any of the food rations that he was offered while he waited. There was nothing particularly alien about what he was given much to his disappointment, some small amounts of meat and what looked and felt like bread, but it all tasted like sawdust to him and made his stomach churn barely a moment after swallowing it.

Alison responded in exactly the same way, although she only had the opportunity to swallow a few mouthfuls of her meal before Zakarr hurried her off for a few practice sessions, dragging her by the wrist into an unmarked room some distance down the corridor. Walter asked if he could come with them to watch and offer encouragement but was declined the opportunity, apparently because he served as too much of a distraction for Allison and it was have a negative impact on her lessons. He took that as a compliment as it had taken a long time for him to gain Allison’s trust and he liked it that other people noticed they were friends. He waved the woman off as she was dragged off into the distance and set about finding a way to entertain himself. After finding out Zakarr’s ship did in fact not have wifi, something which should have been immediately obvious, he set about starting a conversation with a few of the Vulcan crewmembers as he tried to force down the remains of his rations.

Half of the conversation Walter didn’t understand. The crew, a small group of engineers who managed the ship’s engines when they were not on their break babbled on about fusion reactors and flight stabilisers, and the mechanics behind that which made them function. Walter doubted even Earth’s greatest rocket scientist, which was probably Richie if he were to hazard a guess, would be able to understand the entire thing. He did manage to gleam a little useful information off of them, however, mostly about the Vulcan homeworld, information that they were all too willing to share.

It was dying, as Walter already knew. Entire crops were wilting, rivers were drying up, and verdant forests were turning to dust overnight. The atmosphere was breathable, even if the air itself was now incredibly thin, but toxic fumes had started to spill from cracks in the earth that could kill a man in a few short minutes. The gravity was slightly lighter than Earth’s as it always had been, and great canyons marked most of the planet. Walter found their stories hard to take, but he preferred to keep a closer eye on the good thing. Vulca had more exposed rock and less restrictive gravity than Earth did, meaning that his ability to manipulate silicon should be even easier to use than it was back in Metro Bay. His skills would be amplified and he could fight better, meaning he would be of more use to the people who needed him.

Having exhausted himself with conversation, Walter found a calm, quiet portion of the ship somewhere in the storage bay. Here he practiced some rudimentary skills, making the stones he carried dance gracefully in his hands and even manipulating a few larger bricks which had been left among the cargo. It seemed to impress the crew.

~ ~ ~


“You don’t need to replace the barrel with a tungsten alloy, though. These plasma casters should easily be able to resist the heat generated by the plasma bolts if you flash-freeze the inside of the barrel.”

It was Richie who spoke. He rested on his back, the top half of his body lying underneath an obscenely large cannon that was covered in strangely coloured metals and glistening purple neon lights. It hummed gently, showing that it was on but was not drawing a significant amount of power from the ship’s core which it was connected to, and the railings that it rested on could automatically move the weapon so that the barrel was pointing outside of the ship while the controller was safely inside, allowing for ship-to-ship combat without risking the gunman. Richie’s voice was muffled, both by the thick layers of metal between him and the person he was speaking to and the sound of power tools which screamed in the background far louder than he could speak. Ritchie continued to talk regardless, lecturing the ship’s engineers on how to run their own ship.

The head of engineering and weaponry, an old Vulcan man with more gruesome scars than on his body than years he had lived, did not seem all too impressed that this primitive was interfering with his equipment. He felt even worse when the information he was being given started to sink in, proving that Richie did in fact know more about these weapons than he did.

But a small smile crept upon his face. Flash-freezing the barrel of the weapon required large amounts of energy which they couldn’t afford, and he knew for a fact that even some of the most advanced ships didn’t have the capacity to keep the firing barrel of a plasma caster cool.

He responded, his tongue sharp. “Do you know how much additional power that would require to keep it coo for more than a few seconds? And the kind of technology we’d have to get our hands on to keep the weapon from shattering the moment we fired? We just can’t afford it on such limited resou-”

Richie interrupted him by pushing himself out from underneath the weapon. “One moment, Xerxar,” he said, moving over to his glider which was packed neatly up on the desk. Xerxar frowned at the human’s dismissal of his comment, but folded his arms and remained silent for a few moments longer.

A younger ship engineer was giving Richie’s glider a quick glance over, apparently struggling to understand how it even worked. Richie gently pushed him aside and opened up a panel on the bottom, pulling out a small cylinder that was cold to the touch.

Xerxar spoke again. “If you mess with it any more you’re going to break something. Stupid primi-”

Richie had ignored the man once more, sliding himself back underneath the futuristic weapon and connecting the cylinder he had collected to the weapon with a small tube. He flicked a switch and the plasma caster whirred to life, energy flickering from the tip of the barrel like smoke from a chimney. The barrel tipped over, pointing towards the small group of Vulcan engineers, and they immediately panicked. Screaming as they leapt out of the way, flailing their arms about as they did so, they all ducked for what cover they could as the weapon rotated and eventually pointed towards a small circular panel on the side of the ship’s hull. It opened, revealing a small barrier of energy that kept the atmosphere stable, and slid forwards so that the weapon was pointed outside of the ship. After a short period of charging it fired, expelling a huge amount of purple plasma which struck the side of a small asteroid which shot alongside the ship, causing it to shatter into a thousand tiny pieces. The weapon was silenced just as quickly as Richie pulled out a plug, the plasma caster quickly sliding back into its originally position, and the six armed man pushed himself out from underneath the cannon and stood up.

He dusted himself off and offered a hand to help up one of the engineers who hesitantly took it. Richie pulled him up and patted his back reassuringly. “Relax,” Richie said. “No harm done. Promise.”

“Are you insane?” yelled the Xerxar, storming up to Richie and pressing a thick finger against his chest in a threatening manner. He bared his teeth and his breathing was heavy, although whether it was from anger or fear Richie couldn’t tell.

“No, I apologise. You might be thinking of Skull-Man,” he replied. “I rewired part of the firing mechanism and connected it up to a cooling unit from my glider. The weapon still works fine with no additional energy usage, as you just saw, but the cool-off period should have been reduced by thirty or forty percent, give or take.”

The head engineer looked stunned. “That’s impossible. There’s no way a primitive like you could have made a powerful enough cooling system compatible with our technology with no cons”

“I literally just did it.”

~ ~ ~


Allison trained with Zakarr for the best part of four hours before she collapsed to her knees, her body aching and her fingers trembling. She was surprised how long she had managed to stand up to the alien’s assault, taking kicks, punches and telekinetic blasts from all angles. Zakarr was pushing her limited capabilities and even holding back he was destroying her piece by piece. The fire she produced was clumsy and weak, barely enough to ignite a few blocks of wood that had been set up for her to practice. Her armour held up strong, thankfully, and it meant that Zakarr’s punches and kicks grazed off of her skin and prevented any serious damage. It was the only thing that seemed to impress the alien prince, as it made her almost invulnerable to traditional weaponry and combat tactics.

Actually developing her skills, however, was proving fruitless. Her fire manipulation was poor, as it always had been, and despite Ra’s nagging voice whispering in her ear Allison was unable to produce anything that was even remotely like telekinesis. Zakarr’s training was harsh and he refused to let Allison relax, pushing her and pushing her. She knew why he was doing it; stress forced her to try her best, if only to prove to Zakarr that she could do it, but Allison would be lying if she said the new training regimen didn’t exhaust her. She could barely move.

“Stand up,” Zakarr. “Or are all primitives this lazy?”

It was just another attempt to provoke a reaction. Allison clenched her fists and pressed them both against the floor, using her arms to support herself as she stood back up. Her muscles screamed at her to stop but she carried on, sweat dripping from her forehead and her hair matted with it, sticking to her face and neck. Silvery metal covered her body once more and she felt fire seep from her veins, coating both of her arms in it.

Allison threw a punch at Zakarr which he blocked, both of his arms raised to protect his face, and every lunge, kick, and curved punch that Allison threw, the alien prince blocked it. Sparks flew with every punch and fire burst from her body, only glancing off of Zakarr’s body due to the telekinetic barrier he produced. One more try.

“Is that all you can muster? You look like you can barely stand,” Zakarr continued, tossing his staff aside and raising both of his arms and a defensive stance.

The human woman, forcing what energy she had left through her tired limbs, threw herself forwards. She punched and kicked, her arms spitting flames with every movement, and tried her best to find some gap in Zakarr’s defences. Her throws were slow and sluggish, a sharp throb running up her limbs each time, but she fought through it. She threw a kick against the side of Zakarr’s leg, the metal of her leg colliding with his leathery flesh. Allison pulled her leg back, catching her foot on Zakarr’s limb, and tripped the prince. He stood strong but lost his balance, leaving a small enough opening for Allison to take advantage of.

The punch went straight through the alien prince’s block. Allison’s hand erupted with flames at the moment, a spiral of fire which engulfed Zakarr and threw him backwards, scorching the wall behind him. Allison looked just as surprised as he did, worrying if she had hurt the man, but his telekinetic powers were strong and the fires bounced harmlessly off him. She was amazed to find that the fire died as she relaxed her hand, only to flare up again with a clench. Zakarr moved to the side, out of the way of her magical powers, and spent a moment watching the human woman experiment with the fire she could now command easily.

He smiled, watching as she played with her powers. Allison drew tiny shapes in the air with a trail of fire, and then threw a fist sized fireball which collided with the wall. A huge grin spread out across her face, betraying her usually sombre nature. The fires fizzled out quickly as Allison still had issues maintaining them, but she was delighted that she now had some semblance of control.

“Want to try another round?” Allison asked, looking to Zakarr.

The alien prince took his battle stance once more and Allison met it, finding herself invigorated once more. “Do not get cocky, human. You have much to learn.”


Name: James Jeremy Hooke
Age: 48
Gender: Male.

Skills/traits: Having a long history in the navy spanning from his late teens to his late thirties, Hooke is a disciplined and resourceful military man in all manner of endeavours. While not necessarily the smartest individual he is a strong leader figure with a keen mind, able to adapt and react when the situation deems it necessary and has access to a surprisingly sharp tongue when he needs to use it. It was enough to have earned the respect of his fellow crew members and have them accept him as their captain. His time crewing a boat has left him with stronger sea legs than those he used for land and he is skilled in all aspects of life on open waters.

Personality: Hooke is a good man with ultimately good intentions. His causes are just by any standards and some of his escapades could be considered heroic if he were willing to give them a little extra flair. His life has been straight laced, organised and guided by one prevailing ideal. Protection of those who cannot protect themselves. Hooke will tell you that this is not enough to make a man a hero and in spite of it all he knows his chances to be one, if he had ever had one, have long passed.

In recent years his mind has been clouded by a fury and chaos he has never felt before, negative emotions driving every aspect of his being and tipping him a little more over the edge each day. Hell bent on revenge for what one man did to him many years ago, Hooke has an obsession with the criminal underworld and is willing to do anything in order for it to be rooted out. His methods are never quite as noble as his goals and he is willing to pave a way with blood should he need to. Hooke has never given up and while he carries a much darker weight on his shoulders than before he is still strong and stalwart to his cause.



Other: Hooke had his entire left hand removed by the pirate Peter Pan. Having lost the hand entirely it has been replaced with a metal prosthetic hand that, with the tensing of an arm muscle, can open and close. The grip is weak, making it difficult to do anything particularly dexterous, but the metal is strong and with gloves it can easily pass as a real hand.
Posted. :D
Daphne exhaled slowly, pulling back from her stance until the leather of her boots rubbed together with a soft squeak, and she took in another long, deep breath. She exhaled just as slowly and pulled both of her arms back slowly, her long-sword clasped tightly in both hands. The blade pointed upwards, held in such a way that the hilt touched the leather belt wrapped tightly around her hips lightly. Daphne took in another deep breath as she held her preparatory stance again and her eyes locked onto a single point on the wooden wall, examining it intently.

The auburn-haired woman did not see the wall of her tiny shack. She saw soldiers of all kinds before her, from Tindra berserkers to Hari duellists, all of them with their fire in their eyes and with their weapons poised to strike. Some of the individuals resembled people she knew, or at least had known, but many were simply figments of her wild imagination. Their movements were slow and deliberate as if trying to keep a safe distance from Daphne while they sized up their competition. Daphne placed one foot further forwards than the other again, a wide stance to give her the greatest amount of balance, and tilted her sword forwards ever so slightly as if offering her challenge.

Her first opponent mimicked a foe she had duelled two days prior on a contract for the Silver Leaves. Daphne felt as If her battle against him had been sloppy, and she decided it was best to tighten up her skills against such a towering opponent. A large, burly black-blood, made almost entirely out of rippling muscles that were barely covered by metal plating, came into view. He held a gruesome looking cleaver which rested loosely in his right hand but in the other he held a finely crafted short-sword. It looked more like a knife in the hulk’s hands, and as if to prove it he ran the edge of the short-sword against the edge of the oversized cleaver, the swords letting out a high pitched whine as metal struck metal.

Grinning a toothy grin, the orc positioned himself a few metres away from Daphne. He raised his cleaver and pointed it menacingly towards the mercenary woman, an attempt to appear imposing and threatening which had almost no impact. Daphne paid little attention to the façade, only acknowledging the strength that was needed to raise such a weapon with one hand, and locked eyes with the orc. His lips moved just as they had done when they had fought, hurling some threat or insult towards the smaller woman which she paid no heed to. She didn’t need to be ridiculed by her own imagination.

As the sun rose just enough to peak over the skyline of the village that was nestled just outside of the Silver Leaves’ bastion, Daphne’s room was flooded with the dawn’s sunlight. It irritated her eyes even while they were closed, and quickly brought her out of her rather lucid daydream. One hand left the hilt of her blade and moved up to her eyes, rubbing them softly as they adjusted to the light, and she moved to draw the curtains of the only eastern window in her bedroom. Light still filtered through the thin strips of fabric but it made the morning light a little more tolerable. With the distraction reduced she returned to her stance, trying to visualise the goliath in her mind once more.

Sunlight was not the only distraction Daphne was fighting against and she found her focus hard to find. Her neck ached and the skin underneath her eyes was dark, a clear sign of how hard she was fighting to stay awake. When Daphne healed a wound it was always done with haste and was never done with traditional healing magic. A gash along her side that she had received a few days ago from the very same orc she was imagining fighting, a mild wound that was not particularly serious but had hurt more than she wanted to admit, had been stitched together in a rush by her magic but was clearly not done tormenting her. The pain had flared up an hour after she had finally dropped off to sleep the previous night and it kept her awake since.

While the pain had faded it was far too late to consider sleep, but the lack of it was making it hard to concentrate on anything but the comfortable bed that rested beside her. How tempting it was to get another few hours rest before she was needed up at the Bastion and arrive there rested and recuperated.

Daphne’s face twisted into a scowl and her grip on her sword’s hilt grew tighter. She had to abandon any ideas of rest out of her mind. She threw her body forward in a sudden lunge, the metal edge of her long-sword slicing through the air with a clean and sharp whistle. She imagined it piercing the arm of her foe who had not expected such a swift strike, ripping flesh and tearing skin. Daphne’s right hand left her weapon and she followed up the thrust with a sudden punch to the figure’s gut. The black-blood recoiled but Daphne was not finished with him, pulling with her left hand and pushing with her right to draw her blade out of his arm quickly and cleanly.

Grabbing the hilt of the blade with both hands once more, Daphne aimed the tip in the centre of the orc’s chest. She imagined him looking up to her, fear spread across his face and his blood running cold as she brought the blade forwards and impaled him swiftly. The blade jut out from the orc’s back, coated black grime. The orc’s last breath would escape his lips and, when she drew her weapon back out from his chest, he would sink to the floor and move no more.

No, that was too easy.

The woman imagined her first thrust met clean air, the orc dodging it seamlessly. He struck the side of her face with the back of his hand. The metal of his gauntlet cut lightly into her face, a small trickle of blood moving down her cheek. Daphne managed to keep her balance after the strike, yes, but she purposely threw herself to the floor and rolled a short distance away from the orc. She narrowly missed the brute’s cleaver which he swung overhead and brought crashing down into the ground beside her. Her grip loosened and her own sword fell from her grip, clattering across the floor and just out of reach. She felt herself crash into a small table in her room when she rolled, knocking off everything on top of it, but she was entirely focused on the combat style that her mind had constructed for her imaginary foe and cared little about the trail of destruction she was starting to leave through her room.

A hand fell down to her belt and gripped her knife. Daphne pulled it out quickly and brought her arm forwards, aiming the blade for the orc’s forearm. Grabbing his wrist with the other hand to hold his arm still, Daphne brought he knife down to hack at the black-blood’s limb. He yelped in pain and his grip on the gigantic cleaver slacked, giving her enough time to twist her body and kick the blade away across the floor.

She heard a chair topple over as she kicked it.

Preparing herself for her meeting at the Bastion, tiding up her room. hiding all of the new sword marks in the furniture, and apologising to a neighbour who had complained about her making such a racket had taken another forty minutes. Daphne was now outside, walking the streets of the village that lived in the shadow of the Silver Leaves bastion. The wind was cold and sharp and bit at her face, just like every morning, but it put a spring in Daphne’s step as her tiredness began to subside.

She took in a breath of fresh air, pulled her cloak a little closer to her body and set her sights on the Bastion. Daphne made a slow march towards the towering castle, down the winding streets and passages of the village that she knew all too well until the Bastion’s towering gates were in sight.
ActRaiserTheReturned said
Christianize the Catholic Church.


um
In Spam Island 12 yrs ago Forum: Spam Forum
Name: Griffin Heart.
Nickname: Grifflekins
Birthday: 24/08
Grown up or Kid: Grown up
Favourite colour: Purple
Gender: Male



(Yes, I know this is the one Squee made. I'm lazy and figured it was close enough 8D)
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