And I'm back with another list, this time for Ghave, Guru of Spores. I've long been of the opinion that Token decks are, usually, pretty weak in EDH. I've played against a few Rhys the Redeemed decks in my time, and to be perfectly frank, I found them rather easy to defeat.
Counterpunch changes all that, though. Ghave is a powerhouse at churning out tokens and grinding out incremental advantages over the course of a game, and the benefits of having access to Black gives us a lot of important tools that Rhys had to do without. Grave Pact and Attrition, for example, are huge bombs that Ghave is in a unique position to exploit.
Ghave makes tokens very cheaply and efficiently, and just as cheaply converts them into +1/+1 counters where needed most. One of the first and most basic applications of Ghave's abilities is to attack with multiple creatures and, once blockers are declared, use Ghave to move as many +1/+1 counters as possible onto something that didn't get blocked.
But, one of the greatest joys of playing this deck was discovering the multitudes of less-obvious applications. For example, you can put counters on an opponent's creatures when they attack another opponent, making their attack suddenly lethal... I once enabled my Edric, Spymaster of Trest opponent to kill another opponent with General Damage by putting 13 or so counters on Edric. No one was expecting to die to 21 General Damage from Edric, but I made it happen, surprising the hell out of the Edric player and the player being attacked! Watch out, though cause you can't take the counters off of a creature you don't control, even if Ghave put them there.
I don't want to spoil all the fun, though, because that's half the fun of playing this deck... so I'll jut get to the list.
Creatures
Ghave, Guru of Spores
Twilight Drover
Mirror Entity
Academy Rector
Emeria Angel
Elesh Norn, Grand Cenobyte
Fleshbag Marauder
Shriekmaw
Puppeteer Clique
Phyrexian Plaguelord
Sakura-Tribe Elder
Fertilid
Eternal Witness
Forgotten Ancient
Mitotic Slime
Acidic Slime
Primeval Titan
Vigor
Hornet Queen
Avenger of Zendikar
Skullbriar, the Walking Grave
Kitchen Finks
Knight of the Reliquary
Juniper Order Ranger
Teneb, the Harvester
Vish Kal, Blood Arbiter
Karador, Ghost Chieftan
Mindless Automaton
Spells and Stuff
Ajani Goldmane
Elspeth Tirel
Martyr's Bond
Hour of Reckoning
Storm Herd
Attrition
Vigor Mortis
Barter in Blood
Reprocess
Grave Pact
Awakening Zone
Fecundity
Cultivate
Harmonize
Doubling Season
Aura Mutation
Putrefy
Mortify
Vindicate
Aura Shards
Glare of Subdual
Mirari's Wake
Crime // Punishment
Sol Ring
Selesnaya Signet
Orzhov Signet
Golgari Signet
Darksteel Ingot
Lightning Greaves
Blade of the Bloodchief
Skullclamp
Druidic Satchel
Acorn Catapult
Eldrazi Monument
Lands
38 Lands, including the following:
Gaea's Cradel
Oran-Rief, the Vastwood
Volrath's Stronghold
Kor Haven
Ok, first let's get to the elephant in the room, shall we? Doubling Season should have been in this deck. The casual-only Enchantment has seen ZERO competitive play (to the best of my knowledge), but has reached asinine prices due solely to it's huge popularity with the kitchen-table crowd. It's such a damn good card that interacts with a million different things, so it makes sense that it should be one of the most sought-after casual cards in the Ravnica block. But it also would have made sense for WotC to toss us a bone and reprint it in this deck. Alas, they did not, so we must manage on our own. Fortunately I picked up a few when they were about $5 a pop. But, folks, lemme say this: whatever price they command today, if your serious about playing a Ghave deck, PAY IT. It will be worth it.
Moving on, let's talk about parity. Ghave is very cheap and efficient at what he does, but without some outside help, he can't generate a profit of resources. He can turn creatures into counters and counters into creatures, but he needs help to generate more than what he starts with. Doubling Season is just one of the tools that can help Ghave start producing at a profit. For every counter you remove, you get two tokens, one of which you can sac to get two +1/+1 counters. Viola! for 2 colorless mana you just magically gave Ghave an extra +1/+1 counter and made a 1/1 token. Thusly, you can turn every mana you spend into a counter or a token without ever running out of counters or tokens to sacrifice.
Next to Doubling Season, Blade of the Bloodcheif is probably the next best option. Equipping the Guru with this little Blade lets him turn one creature into two +1/+1 counters, but it doesn't work the other way around. Other such cards include: Druidic Satchel, Acorn Catapult, Awakening Zone, Ajani Goldmane, Juniper Order Range, Skullbriar, Vigor, Forgotten Ancient, Emeria Angel, and Twilight Drover. All of these are capable of generating tokens or counters without having to convert one into the other, so combined with Ghave and a sizeable quantity of mana, can generate counters or tokens at a profit. If left unanswered you will continuously generate more and more creatures that will grow and grow.
The real fun is when you get two or three of these incremental-advantage engines going at once - your army will grow exponentially. Some of the options about are a bit slow or unwieldy, but they all have their individual niches where they're quite useful.
Turning those resources into cards is also a neat trick. Reprocess, Skullclamp and Mindless Automaton are good examples of how to achieve this.
Speaking of mana... Gaea's Cradle is easily the second most important card in my list, next to Doubling Season (and not counting Ghave, as he's a gimme). Gaea's Cradle is one of those cards that can single-handedly dominate a game. Well, not single-handedly, I guess - all it does is make mana, so you need something to DO with that mana... but once the Cradle gets rolling it is VERY difficult to stop Ghave from completely dominating the table.
If you're willing to shell out some serious cash to make the deck really sing for you, Gaea's Cradle should be either #1 or #2 on your list, possibly above Doubling Season, but I'm leaning slightly toward the Enchantment, myself.
Academy Rector is pretty clutch, too, since two of the absolute best cards in the deck are Grave Pact and Doubling Season - she'll fetch whichever of those you need most (and, how convenient! Ghave has a built-in sacrifice ability!), and if you're lucky enough to draw both of those targets, she also gets Martyr's Bond or Glare of Subdual.
Phyrexian Plaguelord is a fucking HOUSE. That is all.
Primeval Titan and Knight of the Reliquary... both are such amazing cards in their own right, but here they pretty much exist to find Gaea's Cradle, and once you have the Cradle, their really kinda "meh". Oh, but if you find your Cradle getting popped with Acidic Slimes or Vindicates too often, throw in Mistviel Plains to keep putting Cradle into your library so that KotR or Prime Time can keep digging it back out for you.
Skullbriar is pretty sweet in this deck. I like to use him as a cache for my counters in case of Wrath. Just use all available mana to put as many +1/+1 counters on him as possible, then if you have a reanimation spell or Karador or something, you can bring him back with all of those counters stored safely away with him.
The last card I want to address is Fecundity. I know this effect is "symmetrical" in that your opponents get to draw cards when their dudes bite it. But trust me on this: you will draw 10 times as many cards as any of your opponents ever will. You just wouldn't believe how many times you'll sac a token for some other effect - getting to draw a card on top of that effect is just too damn good. Fecundity might help your opponents out a little here and there - honestly just enough that it might even buy you a little bit of political favor. But by the end of the game, you should be miles ahead in card advantage - enough so that what little help your opponents get off your Fecundity, you will still be so far ahead it won't matter.
Oh, almost forgot - if your group is fine with Infect cards, try Triumph of the Hordes for OMG WIN OUT OF NOWHERE!
Well, that's all for Ghave. Next up I think it'll be Jor Kadeen, but I haven't made my mind up.
Enjoy.
Showing posts with label counterpunch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label counterpunch. Show all posts
Friday, August 26, 2011
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Innistrad / FTV: Legends Spoiler
GENTLEMEN! BEHOLD!
Looks like Ghave, Guru of Spores decks have a new auto-include. Doesn't seem too great overall, but his synergy with Ghave cannot be overlooked. Add a healthy dose of Doubling Season, some Persist creatures and Maybe Ajani Goldmane and you can quickly turn an army of 1/1 saprolings or 0/1 plants into a much scarier army of 5/5's.
To bad he's off-color for Animar decks, though... he'd be pretty good there too.
Monday, June 20, 2011
Lunch Counter: Ghave Deck Tech
Today, I want to take a look at the Counter Punch decklist, headed up by the wonderful Ghave, Guru of Spores. The Counter Punch deck didn’t really look to pack much “punch” when the decklist was first revealed. It was light on amazing reprints, aside from Skullclamp, and it seemed like other decks got the cream of the crop among the brand new spells.
Upon actually playing the deck, I realized that looks were deceiving. It’s actually a rather strong deck, due in part to an excellent General. Ghave is far better and more interesting than I assumed he would be. While he would be an ideal General for a Thallid deck, he’s more open ended than that. He’s “build around me” but there are many ways he can be built around. Before we get started, let’s go over the official list one more time…
1 Aquastrand Spider
1 Celestial Force
1 Chorus of the Conclave
1 Dark Hatchling
1 Deadly Recluse
1 Fertilid
1 Golgari Guildmage
1 Hornet Queen
1 Karador, Ghost Chieftain
1 Monk Realist
1 Nantuko Husk
1 Penumbra Spider
1 Sakura-Tribe Elder
1 Scavenging Ooze
1 Selesnya Evangel
1 Selesnya Guildmage
1 Shriekmaw
1 Sigil Captain
1 Spawnwrithe
1 Spike Feeder
1 Squallmonger
1 Symbiotic Wurm
1 Teneb, the Harvester
1 Vampire Nighthawk
1 Vish Kal, Blood Arbiter
1 Yavimaya Elder
1 Acorn Catapult
1 Afterlife
1 Alliance of Arms
1 Attrition
1 Aura Shards
1 Awakening Zone
1 Bestial Menace
1 Cobra Trap
1 Cultivate
1 Darksteel Ingot
1 Death Mutation
1 Doom Blade
1 Fists of Ironwood
1 Footbottom Feast
1 Golgari Signet
1 Harmonize
1 Hex
1 Hour of Reckoning
1 Lightning Greaves
1 Mortify
1 Necrogenesis
1 Nemesis Trap
1 Oblivion Ring
1 Orzhov Signet
1 Selesnya Signet
1 Skullclamp
1 Sol Ring
1 Soul Snare
1 Storm Herd
1 Syphon Flesh
1 Tribute to the Wild
1 Vow of Duty
1 Vow of Malice
1 Vow of Wildness
1 Barren Moor
1 Command Tower
1 Evolving Wilds
10 Forest
1 Golgari Rot Farm
1 Orzhov Basilica
8 Plains
1 Rupture Spire
1 Secluded Steppe
1 Selesnya Sanctuary
8 Swamp
1 Temple of the False God
1 Tranquil Thicket
1 Vivid Grove
1 Vivid Marsh
1 Vivid Meadow
WotC gave us a good starting point, but despite the fact that this deck does play better than I assumed it would, it definitely does need some help. There are some really obvious inclusions missing and we can start with those.
Doubling Season is probably the most obvious choice here. The interaction between that card and Ghave are just the nuts. With Doubling Season in play, Ghave comes in as a 10/10, and for 1 mana, you can make two saprolings. For two more, you can sac those tokens to put FOUR counters on Ghave (or any other creature). So Ghave basically grows by +4/+4 for every three mana spent.
Ghave himself acts as a sacrifice outlet, and other cards like Attrition and Vish Kal play the role of sac-outlet-with-benefits as well. From here, we want to maximize those benefits, making the cost of sacrificing creatures really pay off. Grave Pact is an obvious place to start, as is the new Martyr’s Bond. Both work to control the board as you toss unneeded tokens into the bin. Finally, I suggest adding Fecundity. Yes, it helps your opponents too, but trust me – you’ll draw FAR more cards with it than they will. And while Skullclamp is very good, it also will draw immediate removal; Fecundity is much less likely to earn the ire of your opponents.
Finally, Mirari’s Wake is a no-brainer. This is a mana-hungry deck and it makes lots of little 1/1 guys. Wake is excellent at increasing mana production AND making your 1/1 critters into a more significant threat. Yeah, it’s slightly anti-synergystic with Skullclamp, but it hardly matters when your General is a sac outlet. Also if anyone is foolish enough to let you have Skullclamp and Wake out at the same time without killing either of them, you’re winning anyway.
+ Grave Pact
+ Doubling Season
+ Fecundity
+ Martyr’s Bond
+ Mirari’s Wake
Hmm… when I see this many Enchantments and I’m in White, the one card I always turn to is Academy Rector. Rector is going to be a clutch here, as she fetches up Doubling Season or any of the other Enchantments I just listed. I don’t see you going for Fecundity over the others, but still…
Oddly, this is one deck where Greater Good and Momentus Fall don’t really appeal to me. They’re usually must-runs in any green deck, but we’re not really playing the usual Teneb game here. There are few fatties you’d really want to sac to those, and 1/1 tokens really play poorly with Greater Good. But, we have Harmonize, Skullclamp and Fecundity for draw. One additional draw spell that might be fun/good is Collective Unconscious.
A quick word about Death Mutation: Yes, it’s on-theme, and yes when I cast it this weekend it was pretty powerful. Still, eight friggin' mana for sorcery speed removal that still has the non-Black restriction is just bad. I’d rather have Vindicate or even Putrefy than this POS.
+ Academy Rector
+ Collective Unconscious
+ Putrefy
+ Vindicate
At this point, I’m tempted to suggest Asceticism and/or Privileged Position… either is a fine card and would be great in the deck, but I don’t want to overload our deck with expensive Enchantments that don’t actually produce any threat or card advantage. If you’re missing one of the first five I listed, you could easily find a slot for one of these alternate suggestions. Debtors' Knell is also pretty good if you’re running Academy Rector, but you’re still going to want to find Doubling Season most of the time, and Teneb/Karador both do a pretty good reanimation job.
Thinking along the lines of a +1/+1 counter theme, you might not be surprised to see a minor Persist package. Kitchen Finks, Puppeteer Clique and Woodfall Primus all get a LOT more attractive when you have a General that can both sac them AND remove their -1/-1 counter! With Finks and Ghave out, you can basically pay 2 mana to gain two life and have the Finks still be a 3/2. Now imagine Woodfall Primus instead… yeah.
Secret Tech: Here’s one Persist card that you might not have thought of right away: Caldron of Souls. Typically, I find this card to be severely underpowered, but here, it seems like a natural fit. It is basically impossible for your opponents to kill Ghave when you have this on the board and 1 mana open. If they Wrath or otherwise destroy him, you simply tap the Cauldron and he comes back with four +1/+1 counters instead of 5. If they go for a Swords to Plowshares or Path to Exile, you just tap the Cauldron, pay 1 to sac Ghave to himself, and even though he comes back their targeted removal doesn’t recognize him as the same target and fizzles!
Since we’re playing with a Persist theme, we might want to make room for a Juniper Order Ranger, the long-time BFF to persist guys everywhere. In fact I think JOR is almost strictly better than Sigil Captain, as he works with ALL your guys, not just the tokens and 1/1s.
+ Kitchen Finks
+ Puppeteer Clique
+ Woodfall Primus
+ Cauldron of Souls
+ Juniper Order Ranger
Well, that’s quite a few additions. Let’s see what we can cut to make room. I don’t want to cut the brand-new stuff if I can help it. They were printed specifically with EDH in mind, so I want to give them all plenty of time to prove themselves and see how they play. I like the Vow cycle quite a bit already, and this deck doesn’t have any of the new counterspells. The one thing I just can’t live with is Celestial Force, which I have moved out of this deck and into the Zedruu deck for now – that way I can still play with the card, but in a deck that can make some use out of it.
- Oblivion Ring
- Footbottom Feast
- Alliance of Arms
- Cobra Trap
- Death Mutation
- Tribute to the Wild
- Deadly Recluse
- Monk Realist
- Squall Monger
- Selesnaya Evangel
- Sigil Captain
- Spike Feeder
- Penumbra Spider
- Spawnwrithe
Alliance of Arms will also be moved to a different deck. It’s not that it’s not GOOD here, but really we just don’t need to be the one casting it – if someone else casts it, we still get tokens! Tribute to the Wild also wasn’t doing it for me. Every time I had it in hand I really desperately needed to kill a Mirari or a Phyrexian Metamorph, but instead my opponents wound up sacrificing a Signet or something meaningless. I realize I’ve also cut the deck’s flying defenses down from mediocre to non-existant. But honestly, do we really want cards like Deadly Recluse? I do like Vampire Nighthawk enough to try and leave him around. There is a pretty good chance he can grow much larger than 2/3.
So, we will try to find a way to fit in a bit more anti-Flying defenses. Usually, the best way to do this is to run stuff with Flying, like Akroma or something. I need Akroma for Kaalia, though. One card I love is Silklash Spider. Not many creatures can block Akroma and walk away, but Silky gets it done. And when he’s sick of blocking, you can just tap out and kill everything.
Plummet is really good too. I’ll probably swap out Doom Blade (a card that was VERY poor all weekend long, for me) for a Plummet.
Secret Tech: Twilight Drover. I don’t really have much to say – once you read the card you’ll see why he’s a good fit. Where else are you going to use him?
-Doomblade
- Hex
- Afterlife
+Plummet
+ Silklash Spider
+ Twilight Drover
One thing this deck needs is a way to get back spent guys. We don’t want to push a heavy reanimation theme, as that would step on Karador’s and Teneb’s toes, and at that point we should be running one of them as our General. But I have one spell in mind: Vigor Mortis. I’ve always enjoyed that card, as an almost-strictly-better Zombify. It has the bonus that the +1/+1 counter actually matters. Miraculous Recovery is an Instant-speed reanimation spell that puts a +1/+1 counter on the creature, so that’s up for consideration as well. I’ll just stick to Vigor Mortis, for now.
Oh, speaking of Vigor and +1/+1 counters… Vigor. Yeah!
And finally, what would any Token-Rock deck be without Phyrexian Plaguelord?
-Nantuko Husk
- Fists of Ironwood
- Bestial Menace
+ Vigor Mortis
+ Phyrexian Plaguelord
+ Vigor
All that’s left now is to wrap up the Lands. The one thing I was worried about with these decks was the mana base. I am pleased and surprised to report that they play pretty smoothly as-is, but obviously a smattering of dual lands couldn’t hurt. You don’t need me to tell you that, though. I’ll just skip to the “utility” lands you might consider. Gaea’s Cradle is an obvious starting point, but pricey. It’s not necessary, but it’ll help a lot if you have one. Phyrexian Tower is a fine choice, and so is Volrath’s Stronghold. Kor Haven is great at defense, as is Mystifying Maze.
Llanowar Reborn is a great way to put an extra +1/+1 counter somewhere, but the really exciting land, at least for me, is Oran-Rief, the Vastwood. +1/+1 Counters for everyone?! Sign me up! Combined with Doubling Season, Oran Rief is downright amazing. Oh, and it’s another way to abuse your Persist guys.
So that’s the direction I’m heading in right now. I have some ideas that I haven’t worked in yet, either because I don’t have the cards or don’t have the room (until I test further to see what doesn’t work out).
Further ideas for exploration:
Further ideas for exploration:
Planeswalkers: The deck would benefit from having a planeswalker or two. Garruk is an excellent go-to, but the main one I am interested in is Elspeth Tirel. I don’t own a copy of the new Elspeth, but I might have to get one, just for this deck. Even the original (and mostly superior) Elspeth is fine here, especially if you get Doubling Season out first.
Avenger of Zendikar is a big fat DUH here, and so is his BFF Primeval Titan. I’d throw both in anywhere I could fit them, but they actually MAKE SENSE here, as the deck has a legitimate need for obsene amounts of mana and the Avenger is totally on-theme here and has great synergy with the deck. Both cards are so good they are playable without any inherent synergy with your deck, but when they actually do fit the deck this well you don’t feel like a dick for playing them.
If you do manage to add Prime Time, you could probably get away with running Emeria, and definitely the good ol’ Urborg/Coffers dream-team. Just make sure you actually have enough plains to truly support Emeria. It’s often risky/do-nothing in a 3-color deck, but if you keep the Plains count high enough (and remember – Godless Shrine, Temple Garden and the ABUR Duals count!) you should be able to make it work.
On the janky side of things, Mitotic Slime, Ant Queen and Beacon of Creation could all be role-players here. Martial Coup is a fantastic on-theme Wrath effect, and Deranged Hermit plays nicely with Acorn Catapult.
Glare of Subdual could be a potent addition as well.
Yosei the Morning Star is an all-star in any deck with a sac-outlet for a General, but is best when you have reliable ways to recur him. That said, some folks don’t really like Yosei-locks, and I totally get that! Just keep it in mind if you do include him, that people might frown upon such a thing.
There’s not much in the way of Equipment – Greaves is all you get. And really, I didn’t feel like this deck NEEDED Equipment that badly. However, few decks get worse for having a few pieces of Equipment. The Swords of Stuff and Junk are always fantastic, but I’d like to be a bit more… creative with my choices. Sword of Feast and Famine gets the nod, if you do want at least one Sword.
But one thing I have my eye on is Blade of the Bloodchief. Nevermind that there are only two vampires in the deck, just put this guy on your general then start churning tokens like a madman. Though, you wouldn’t be a scrub, in my mind, if you wanted to add a couple more vamps to the mix – Butcher of Malakir is great, and even Drana could work out quite nicely. But trust me, when you play this deck a LOT of creatures die, so the Blade can easily turn even a Vampire Nighthawk into the biggest threat on the board. If you manage to Equip it to Vish Kal… oh wow!
Another cool piece of steel is Deathrender. Stick it on any token, then sac it to drop a Vigor, or a Hornet Queen, or whatever. I got a free Selesnya Guildmage one turn, and while that seems horrible, it proved VERY relevant in the particular situation I was in!
Finally, I want to go full-scrub for a moment and suggest Konda’s Banner. Two to cast, two to Equip and it basically gives every creature in your deck at least +1/+1. Okay, so maybe that is too janky even for me.
The Lieges from Shadowmoor/Eventide are interesting – there isn’t much to really do with Wilt-Leaf Liege, sadly, and I’d expect Deathbringer to under-perform, though he’s possibly worth trying. But oddly the Creakwood Liege seems the most appropriate here. He makes tokens and pumps almost any other token you could make (only the Twilight Drover’s wouldn’t get the bonus). He also keeps your general alive as a 2/2 if you use up all his +1/+1 counters somehow. Plus, like almost everything else these days, Creakwood is great with Doubling Season.
Speaking of Shadowmoor, Shield of the Oversoul is worth a glance, but if you’re really just after the Indestructible ability, maybe Darksteel Plate is a better choice (though more expensive, of course). Or, you could go with Eldrazi Monument. You shouldn’t have too much trouble cranking out tokens to feed it every upkeep, and it makes your whole army Indestructible.
Akroma’s Memorial and of course the ever-ubiquitous Coat of Arms can certainly help you win games on the spot. Other insta-win type cards include Triumph of the Hordes, Overrun or Overwhelming Stampede.
If you want to play up the Saproling theme a bit more, without going Thallid (don’t; Thallids are terrible), you could slot in Verdeloth the Ancient and Nemata, Grove Guardian. I personally wouldn’t go this route unless I was also doing the Primeval Titan thing to get Cradle/Coffers/Urborg level mana. If you do THAT, Genesis Wave starts to look highly appealing, if you weren’t already running it.
This is a rare Green deck that does not seem to want Tooth and Nail, but it’s not a bad idea to just T&N Butcher of Malakir and Vish Kal out onto a board full of tokens. That said, I’d probably just go for a Eladamri's Call or Primal Command for creature-tutoring. Defense of the Heart is another perfectly acceptable alternative.
Geth, Lord of the Vault and Elesh Norn, Grand Cenobyte also seem like they’d be great in this deck, though Geth does push the reanimation a little hard. Elesh Norn is more tempting and keeps us out of Teneb’s domain.
Birthing Pod could be playable, but this is not the absolute best place for it – you are usually going to want to sac a Token, but that doesn’t help since there are no compelling 1-mana guys to play, unless you somehow wind up with Soul Warden in the deck. Still, I put the Pod in my build anyway, and it was pretty key to getting Butcher of Malakir onto the board once. Dunno if it’s truly the right deck for it, but if you at least keep Karador in the deck and maybe one or two other reanimators like Vigor Mortis, it could easily be worth it.
The deck’s low-ish mana curve makes Sun Titan pretty appealing, and all the 0/0 cards like Fertilid and Aquastrand Spider could enable Reveillark foolishness. Reveillark + Hornet Queen also seems really funny.
Well, that’s about it for me, but I think I’ve clearly demonstrated that there is a LOT of room to optimize and individualize a Ghave deck without making it look like “a Teneb deck with the wrong General”. While the two decks will share some staple utility cards, the meat of the decks could and should look very different. WBG Reanimator is fun but overplayed, but if you want to keep your Mortify/Putrefy/Vindicate package but do something different, Ghave should be right up your alley.
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