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X-MEN: THE ROAD TO VOLUME 2 PDF, EPUB, EBOOK

Scott Lobdell,,Terry Kavanagh | 440 pages | 15 Jul 2014 | | 9780785188308 | English | New York, United States X-Men Onslaught Reading Order | Full Event Crossover!

Love this period of the X-Men. It's what drew me back into reading comics again after years of not. Great stories. Terrific art. I'd really love to see all three of these Road To Onslaughts collected into one big Omnibus. It's wonderful, classic material. Can't beat it. Peak period X-Men. Must reading for all X-Men fans. Aug 30, Adam Stone rated it really liked it Shelves: -comics , x-men-universe. Part two of a series that is just a collection of random stories sort of leading up to a major event sets a pretty low bar for enjoyment. I really expected to find myself flipping through this while rolling my eyes. I found myself, instead, enjoying several short X-Men stories that share little more than the publication dates and a few characters. A better name for this trade would be X-Men vs. The 90s X-book continuity. Most of these stories seem to be trying to end the weird, disappointing stor Part two of a series that is just a collection of random stories sort of leading up to a major event sets a pretty low bar for enjoyment. Most of these stories seem to be trying to end the weird, disappointing storylines that preceded it. In some ways by throwing very weird new storylines: the introduction of , a crossover with ClanDestine, expanding the mythos around the Guthrie family. Most of them work in this volume. For me, they work because they aren't dwelled on long enough to be excruciating, which is one of the most frequent causes of a bad X-story: going on for too long. The X-Babies? Two issues and you can forget about them for years. Two issues and you're never going to see them again. Two issues to move his story in a completely different direction. The Guthrie clan's family problem? One long issue. is even used judiciously in these volumes. This volume won't be for everybody. But if you really liked the weird end of the 90s X-books, this book has just what you're looking for. Nov 22, Mitchell rated it it was ok Shelves: fiction , graphic-novel , library , series , superhero , liked-reviews , published , author-d , two-star. No through story here. Just a semi-random collection, some that make a little sense and some that don't make any. The bit at the end with and apparently Onslaught was definitely the worst - didn't make sense and really wasn't interesting. Even the X-Babies story was better and that's saying something. escaping had some moments of interest. Actually th No through story here. Actually the Guthrie's going home to check on one of their siblings was the only decent story. Basically this book was a waste of time. May 02, Judah Radd rated it liked it Shelves: marvel-comics. A little bit better than the last one, but not by much. There were some cool stories and some dumb ones. The X-Babies?? Sabertooth fucking up was intense. Dark and were fun to see. I love anything that reminds me of age of . The return of Belascos and those pirat A little bit better than the last one, but not by much. The return of Belascos and those pirates was pretty underwhelming and, to be honest, kinda boring. I look forward to where this goes, but this book felt a bit sloggish. Mar 04, Baba rated it really liked it Shelves: x-men-verse-snikt. This classic phase of the X-Men mythos centres around the attempted rehabilitation of Sabretooth! Jan 28, Jerry rated it liked it. This collection was decent, but it had a bit too much filler. Let's hope that the final volume has more content. Jul 08, Will Cooper rated it liked it. Many stand alone stories, varying in quality. Eh, sure, whatever. I didn't hate this as much as I thought I would, haha. X-Men vol. In July during a revamp of the X-Men franchise, its title changed to New X-Men , featuring an ambigram logo issue Along with these modifications, a new writer, Grant Morrison , was assigned to the title. These changes by the newly appointed Marvel Comics editor-in-chief, Joe Quesada , reflected his idea for flagship titles like X-Men to regain some of their former glory, as well as regaining critical acclaim. While the second squad of X-Men in Uncanny continued on as now undercover super heroes, Grant Morrison redirected these X-Men's mission to that of teachers. Some more of the long-lasting changes that occurred during Morrison's run were the secondary mutation of Beast to resemble a lion-like rather than his former ape-like appearance, and introduced as a member of the team, recreating the ties between and the Phoenix retconning the retcon , and the death of Phoenix. The school expanded from simply a training center to a legitimate school with dozens of students, a story idea that was first explored in the X-Men film. One of the more controversial events of New X-Men happened in issue when the island of and its inhabitants, including , were completely destroyed. This set the tone that dominated the rest of Morrison's tenure on the book. The title of the series reverted to its original title of X-Men in July with issue during the " X-Men Reload " event. Peter Milligan became the new writer of the series with issue and was replaced by with issue The title was renamed X-Men: Legacy starting in February with issue The new title reflects a shift in the series direction to focusing on solo X-Men characters versus being a team-based book as the title was previously. The re-titled series follows on from the conclusion of the Messiah Complex crossover, where was accidentally shot in the head by Bishop. Shortly after the X-Men presumed him deceased, his body disappeared and his whereabouts were unknown. X-Men: Legacy initially followed the Professor's presumed road to recovery as well as the encounters he faced, such as a battle with the mutant on the psychic plane [12] and discoveries about his past that include Mr. Many characters have been featured in the title, including , Magneto , , and the Acolytes. The title also featured flashbacks relevant to the ongoing present story as well as answered dangling plot lines throughout X-Men continuity. As of issue , Rogue replaced Professor Xavier as the central character. Having now achieved control over her absorption powers, Scott Summers has repositioned Rogue as mentor to the younger mutants under the protection of the X-Men on Utopia. Rogue is in the unique position to be able to help the students, due to her abilities, allowing fresh insight to their use and control. She has so far, also, been shown to face off against notable deadly adversaries including: Emplate and . The title was one of two ongoing books to house the Age of X crossover. As part of the Marvel NOW! The new series focused on , the son of the recently murdered Charles Xavier, who is struggling to keep his multitude of personalities under control while trying to honor his father's legacy by preemptively fighting off threats to mutants using his many powers. The 25th issue of the volume was renumbered to commemorate the longevity of the series. This is also the final issue of X-Men: Legacy. However, that series was renamed after its featured character. Become a Patron! X-Men Modern Era. As is the way of the X-Men, the Onslaught collected editions begin with a weird, complex, confusing twist. As you know, the Road to Onslaught collection are above, with the Complete Epic below. It functions very much like a Wikipedia recap of the X-Men up until this point, with excerpts from comics and a fair amount of overlap with The Road to Onslaught. X-Men 25 Part of Fatal Attractions. X-Men 50 issues is collected in Road to Onslaught Vol. Earth Beast! It is collected in Road to Onslaught Vol. If you like Herald, and are able to donate, any small contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Donate here! Or learn more about easy ways to support Comic Book Herald! Or you can even check out the CBH Merch store and get something nice with a small portion benefiting the site! Your reading order through the whole Onslaught era has been invaluable, and my roadmap. X-Men: The Road to Onslaught, Vol. 2 by Alan Davis

Please enable JavaScript in your browser and refresh the page. We are shipping all orders on time, but please expect possible delays in transit. The post office and other shippers are overwhelmed and some shipments may experience significant delays. Some international orders have seen delays as large as weeks. Auction in progress, bid now! Weekly Auction ends Monday October 26! Volume 1 - 1st printing. Cover by Joe Madureira. The X-Men have just averted the Age of Apocalypse, but the threat of Onslaught looms right around the corner - a villain so powerful he put the unstoppable into a coma! Plus: How will the world react when the Legacy virus' existence is made public? Can Rogue handle learning Gambit's greatest secret? And did Sabretooth's brain damage truly change his personality, or is he a time bomb waiting to go off? All this, and the Xavier Institute enrolls a new student! Softcover, pages, full color. This item is not in stock. If you use the "Add to want list" tab to add this issue to your want list, we will email you when it becomes available. Volume 2 - 1st printing. Cover by Jeff Matsuda. The buildup to Marvel's darkest hour continues as the X-Men face danger from without and within! What decades-old connection does Professor X have with the secretive Clan Destine? When Synraith returns, the two teams clash - but all is not what it seems! As it stands, Onslaught is one of the more poorly collected events inside Marvel Unlimited many issues are missing. There is, fortunately, a reasonably straightforward for the X-Men way to navigate the event through collected trade paperbacks and even an omnibus. I will lay out the trade reading order, and issue by issue comic book reading order for Onslaught below. X-Men Claremont Era. Age of Apocalypse. Comic Book Herald is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn a qualifying affiliate commission. Any size contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Thank you for reading! Become a Patron! X-Men Modern Era. As is the way of the X-Men, the Onslaught collected editions begin with a weird, complex, confusing twist. As you know, the Road to Onslaught collection are above, with the Complete Epic below. It functions very much like a Wikipedia recap of the X-Men up until this point, with excerpts from comics and a fair amount of overlap with The Road to Onslaught. X-Men 25 Part of Fatal Attractions. X-Men 50 issues is collected in Road to Onslaught Vol. Earth Beast! It is collected in Road to Onslaught Vol. If you like Comic Book Herald, and are able to donate, any small contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Donate here! Or learn more about easy ways to support Comic Book Herald! X-Men Road to Onslaught TPB ( Marvel) comic books

More filters. Sort order. Mar 24, David rated it it was amazing Shelves: comic-books , all-time-favorites. Love this period of the X-Men. It's what drew me back into reading comics again after years of not. Great stories. Terrific art. I'd really love to see all three of these Road To Onslaughts collected into one big Omnibus. It's wonderful, classic material. Can't beat it. Peak period X-Men. Must reading for all X-Men fans. Aug 30, Adam Stone rated it really liked it Shelves: superhero-comics , x-men-universe. Part two of a series that is just a collection of random stories sort of leading up to a major event sets a pretty low bar for enjoyment. I really expected to find myself flipping through this while rolling my eyes. I found myself, instead, enjoying several short X-Men stories that share little more than the publication dates and a few characters. A better name for this trade would be X-Men vs. The 90s X-book continuity. Most of these stories seem to be trying to end the weird, disappointing stor Part two of a series that is just a collection of random stories sort of leading up to a major event sets a pretty low bar for enjoyment. Most of these stories seem to be trying to end the weird, disappointing storylines that preceded it. In some ways by throwing very weird new storylines: the introduction of Joseph, a crossover with ClanDestine, expanding the mythos around the Guthrie family. Most of them work in this volume. For me, they work because they aren't dwelled on long enough to be excruciating, which is one of the most frequent causes of a bad X-story: going on for too long. The X-Babies? Two issues and you can forget about them for years. Two issues and you're never going to see them again. Two issues to move his story in a completely different direction. The Guthrie clan's family problem? One long issue. Wolverine is even used judiciously in these volumes. This volume won't be for everybody. But if you really liked the weird end of the 90s X-books, this book has just what you're looking for. Nov 22, Mitchell rated it it was ok Shelves: fiction , graphic-novel , library , series , superhero , liked-reviews , published , author-d , two-star. No through story here. Just a semi-random collection, some that make a little sense and some that don't make any. The bit at the end with Bishop and apparently Onslaught was definitely the worst - didn't make sense and really wasn't interesting. Even the X-Babies story was better and that's saying something. Sabretooth escaping had some moments of interest. Actually th No through story here. Actually the Guthrie's going home to check on one of their siblings was the only decent story. Basically this book was a waste of time. May 02, Judah Radd rated it liked it Shelves: marvel-comics. A little bit better than the last one, but not by much. There were some cool stories and some dumb ones. The X-Babies?? Sabertooth fucking up Psylocke was intense. and Sugar Man were fun to see. I love anything that reminds me of age of apocalypse. The return of Belascos and those pirat A little bit better than the last one, but not by much. The return of Belascos and those pirates was pretty underwhelming and, to be honest, kinda boring. I look forward to where this goes, but this book felt a bit sloggish. Mar 04, Baba rated it really liked it Shelves: x-men-verse-snikt. This classic phase of the X-Men mythos centres around the attempted rehabilitation of Sabretooth! Jan 28, Jerry rated it liked it. This collection was decent, but it had a bit too much filler. Let's hope that the final volume has more content. Jul 08, Will Cooper rated it liked it. Many stand alone stories, varying in quality. Eh, sure, whatever. I didn't hate this as much as I thought I would, haha. Clan Destine was a basic story of two heroic groups fighting and a few powerful psychics having to close a portal so a destructive entity doesn't destroy Earth. You know. But thankfully Alan Davis drew it, so I liked pushing my eyes over the story! The best part of this trade was the Sabretooth storyline. Interesting to see Xavier's thought process and emotions running Many stand alone stories, varying in quality. Interesting to see Xavier's thought process and emotions running high. Aug 16, Jay Rox rated it really liked it. Magneto is a good person that does terrible things but had he lead a different life his actions would be different and Saberthooth who is a lost cause no matter what. Sep 05, Jan Geerling rated it liked it. The Kubert, Cruz and Madureira artwork is nice and the Lobdell stories have a fun soap attraction. But there are a few filler stories Alan Davis i could have done without. Aug 20, Jdetrick rated it liked it Shelves: creator-alan-davis , creator-mark- waid , ebooks , genre-comics , genre-superheroes , publisher-marvel. There's some fun comics in here Alan Davis' ClanDestine , but to say this is the road to Onslaught seems somewhat untrue Jan 04, Shannon Appelcline rated it liked it Shelves: comics , comics-marvel , comics-marvel-xmen. I suppose it's nice to get all the X-Men stories from this era, but this one seems totally irrelevant to the ongoing plotlines and not really tied to continuity. Uncanny X-Men ' Although Terry K. X-Babies XM This starts off as a rather nice character piece focusing on great issues like the X- Traitor and Bobby's powers, but then the X-Babies appear and it turns into an issue and a half of mindless mayhem and stupid cuteness. Joseph UXM I found Joseph an intriguing addition to the X-Men mythology, but this is nonetheless a very slow story. Bloodscream XMU 9. This should have been a great story, with its Claremont continuity, starting with Lee Forrester. Unfortunately, as more and more Claremont elements return, they start to become farcical. And by this point, between Clandestine, X-Babies, Joseph, and Bloodscream, I feel like we've had the ongoing plots of the previous volume pretty horribly derailed. Sabretooth UXM, S1. The title began its publication in October as X-Men vol. From until it was published as New X-Men. It had reverted from issue to its original title X-Men , but changed again from issue to X-Men: Legacy. Prior to the name change, the series is usually referred to as X- Men vol. The new volume, written by Simon Spurrier , focuses on Legion , son of the recently deceased Professor X , and his mission to preemptively help mutantkind while attempting to get his many personalities under control. In , Marvel launched X-Men vol. X-Men 1 is still the bestselling comic book of all time, with pre-order sales of over 8. Initially, the book focused on a team led by Cyclops, with the other members forming a squad led by . This premise has at times faded from mention, only to be resurrected, with the X-Men divided at times into two and even three separate squads. X-Men vol. In July during a revamp of the X-Men franchise, its title changed to New X-Men , featuring an ambigram logo issue Along with these modifications, a new writer, Grant Morrison , was assigned to the title. These changes by the newly appointed Marvel Comics editor-in-chief, Joe Quesada , reflected his idea for flagship titles like X-Men to regain some of their former glory, as well as regaining critical acclaim. While the second squad of X-Men in Uncanny continued on as now undercover super heroes, Grant Morrison redirected these X-Men's mission to that of teachers. Some more of the long-lasting changes that occurred during Morrison's run were the secondary mutation of Beast to resemble a lion-like rather than his former ape-like appearance, and Emma Frost introduced as a member of the team, recreating the ties between Jean Grey and the Phoenix retconning the retcon , and the death of Phoenix. The school expanded from simply a training center to a legitimate school with dozens of mutant students, a story idea that was first explored in the X-Men film. One of the more controversial events of New X-Men happened in issue when the island of Genosha and its inhabitants, including Magneto , were completely destroyed. This set the tone that dominated the rest of Morrison's tenure on the book. The title of the series reverted to its original title of X-Men in July with issue during the " X-Men Reload " event. Peter Milligan became the new writer of the series with issue and was replaced by Mike Carey with issue The title was renamed X-Men: Legacy starting in February with issue The new title reflects a shift in the series direction to focusing on solo X-Men characters versus being a team-based book as the title was previously. The re-titled series follows on from the conclusion of the Messiah Complex crossover, where Professor X was accidentally shot in the head by Bishop. Shortly after the X-Men presumed him deceased, his body disappeared and his whereabouts were unknown. X-Men: Legacy initially followed the Professor's presumed road to recovery as well as the encounters he faced, such as a battle with the mutant Exodus on the psychic plane [12] and discoveries about his past that include Mr. Many characters have been featured in the title, including Rogue , Magneto , Gambit , and the Acolytes. The title also featured flashbacks relevant to the ongoing present story as well as answered dangling plot lines throughout X-Men continuity. As of issue , Rogue replaced Professor Xavier as the central character. Having now achieved control over her absorption powers, Scott Summers Cyclops has repositioned Rogue as mentor to the younger mutants under the protection of the X-Men on Utopia. Rogue is in the unique position to be able to help the students, due to her abilities, allowing fresh insight to their use and control. She has so far, also, been shown to face off against notable deadly adversaries including: Emplate and Proteus. The title was one of two ongoing books to house the Age of X crossover. As part of the Marvel NOW! The new series focused on Legion , the son of the recently murdered Charles Xavier, who is struggling to keep his multitude of personalities under control while trying to honor his father's legacy by preemptively fighting off threats to mutants using his many powers. The 25th issue of the volume was renumbered to commemorate the longevity of the series. This is also the final issue of X-Men: Legacy. However, that series was renamed Nightcrawler after its featured character. Since the introduction of X-Men , the plotlines of this series and other X-Books have been interwoven to varying degrees. For most of its run, X-Men has featured a completely different battalion of X-Men than other titles featuring the X-Men. While it was not uncommon for characters of one book to appear in the other, any major stories concerning characters were dealt with in their own team book. X-Men and Uncanny X-Men have shared two periods of time where they were more or less treated as a single, fortnightly series. In both of these cases they shared an author: to by and to by Alan Davis.

X-Men: The Road to Onslaught Vol. 2 (Trade Paperback) | Comic Issues | Comic Books | Marvel There is, fortunately, a reasonably straightforward for the X-Men way to navigate the event through collected trade paperbacks and even an omnibus. I will lay out the trade reading order, and issue by issue comic book reading order for Onslaught below. X-Men Claremont Era. Age of Apocalypse. Comic Book Herald is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn a qualifying affiliate commission. Any size contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Thank you for reading! Become a Patron! X-Men Modern Era. As is the way of the X-Men, the Onslaught collected editions begin with a weird, complex, confusing twist. As you know, the Road to Onslaught collection are above, with the Complete Epic below. It functions very much like a Wikipedia recap of the X-Men up until this point, with excerpts from comics and a fair amount of overlap with The Road to Onslaught. X-Men 25 Part of Fatal Attractions. X-Men 50 issues is collected in Road to Onslaught Vol. Earth Beast! It is collected in Road to Onslaught Vol. If you like Comic Book Herald, and are able to donate, any small contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Donate here! Or learn more about easy ways to support Comic Book Herald! Or you can even check out the CBH Merch store and get something nice with a small portion benefiting the site! The bit at the end with Bishop and apparently Onslaught was definitely the worst - didn't make sense and really wasn't interesting. Even the X-Babies story was better and that's saying something. Sabretooth escaping had some moments of interest. Actually th No through story here. Actually the Guthrie's going home to check on one of their siblings was the only decent story. Basically this book was a waste of time. May 02, Judah Radd rated it liked it Shelves: marvel-comics. A little bit better than the last one, but not by much. There were some cool stories and some dumb ones. The X-Babies?? Sabertooth fucking up Psylocke was intense. Dark Beast and Sugar Man were fun to see. I love anything that reminds me of age of apocalypse. The return of Belascos and those pirat A little bit better than the last one, but not by much. The return of Belascos and those pirates was pretty underwhelming and, to be honest, kinda boring. I look forward to where this goes, but this book felt a bit sloggish. Mar 04, Baba rated it really liked it Shelves: x-men-verse-snikt. This classic phase of the X-Men mythos centres around the attempted rehabilitation of Sabretooth! Jan 28, Jerry rated it liked it. This collection was decent, but it had a bit too much filler. Let's hope that the final volume has more content. Jul 08, Will Cooper rated it liked it. Many stand alone stories, varying in quality. Eh, sure, whatever. I didn't hate this as much as I thought I would, haha. Clan Destine was a basic story of two heroic groups fighting and a few powerful psychics having to close a portal so a destructive entity doesn't destroy Earth. You know. But thankfully Alan Davis drew it, so I liked pushing my eyes over the story! The best part of this trade was the Sabretooth storyline. Interesting to see Xavier's thought process and emotions running Many stand alone stories, varying in quality. Interesting to see Xavier's thought process and emotions running high. Aug 16, Jay Rox rated it really liked it. Magneto is a good person that does terrible things but had he lead a different life his actions would be different and Saberthooth who is a lost cause no matter what. Sep 05, Jan Geerling rated it liked it. The Kubert, Cruz and Madureira artwork is nice and the Lobdell stories have a fun soap attraction. But there are a few filler stories Alan Davis i could have done without. Aug 20, Jdetrick rated it liked it Shelves: creator-alan-davis , creator-mark- waid , ebooks , genre-comics , genre-superheroes , publisher-marvel. There's some fun comics in here Alan Davis' ClanDestine , but to say this is the road to Onslaught seems somewhat untrue Jan 04, Shannon Appelcline rated it liked it Shelves: comics , comics-marvel , comics-marvel-xmen. I suppose it's nice to get all the X-Men stories from this era, but this one seems totally irrelevant to the ongoing plotlines and not really tied to continuity. Uncanny X-Men ' Although Terry K. X-Babies XM This starts off as a rather nice character piece focusing on great issues like the X- Traitor and Bobby's powers, but then the X-Babies appear and it turns into an issue and a half of mindless mayhem and stupid cuteness. Joseph UXM I found Joseph an intriguing addition to the X-Men mythology, but this is nonetheless a very slow story. Bloodscream XMU 9. This should have been a great story, with its Claremont continuity, starting with Lee Forrester. Unfortunately, as more and more Claremont elements return, they start to become farcical. And by this point, between Clandestine, X-Babies, Joseph, and Bloodscream, I feel like we've had the ongoing plots of the previous volume pretty horribly derailed. Sabretooth UXM, S1. This short arc has a nice start, as we bring a close to the long-running Sabertooth story, and see some of the X-Men's reaction to it. Unfortunately, it then turns into a long-running fight in the Sabertooth mega-issue. Characters XM Unfortunately as a whole this volume is an incoherent mess, thanks in large part to the extraneous issues dumped in here and in small part to the X-Babies digression. It's a pity, because at its best this volume does a good job of mimicking the character-driven stories of Claremont. However, this volume also includes the '90s at its worst, as exemplified by the Bloodscream issue of X- Men Unlimited, which is a mishmash including a stupid '90s villain. Feb 10, Robert rated it it was ok Recommends it for: Honestly? Completists and Masochists. Shelves: marvel , x-marks-the-book. Just when I thought a compilation couldn't get much more "90s" than Road to Onslaught 1, here comes: Clan Destine who? Amnesiac Chibi Magneto! Evil Beast from another timeline? The art is loud and colourful, at least, so one can enjoy that as long as the ridiculous Barbie-esque proportions of basically every single female character, even the ones in the background, don't bother you too much and goofy one-offs like the X-People playing poker with The Just when I thought a compilation couldn't get much more "90s" than Road to Onslaught 1, here comes: Clan Destine who? The art is loud and colourful, at least, so one can enjoy that as long as the ridiculous Barbie-esque proportions of basically every single female character, even the ones in the background, don't bother you too much and goofy one-offs like the X-People playing poker with The Thing. Perhaps the only redeeming story is the original 5 X-Men hunting down the escaped Sabretooth in Manhattan. But that was maybe 30 pages out of Overall, a grim reminder of the worst of the 90s X-cess. Mar 05, Iliyan Iliev rated it liked it. Slightly uneven both as art and storywise. Jeff Harris rated it really liked it Jul 06, EP rated it liked it Dec 18, Ugo Lacombe rated it it was ok Aug 05, Megan rated it liked it Jan 06, Jonathan Sturgeon rated it really liked it Aug 26, Rob Marney rated it it was ok Aug 05, Clifford rated it really liked it Feb 03, Leandro Rabinovich rated it liked it Jan 05, Stephen rated it really liked it Oct 06, Ryan Duncan rated it really liked it Jul 22, Galen rated it liked it Jan 29, Noriel rated it really liked it Dec 20, Madeline Friedman rated it liked it Aug 21, There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Readers also enjoyed. 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