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5[[quoteright:133:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/scale_of_animal_humans_4.png]]
6[[caption-width-right:133:Top to bottom: [[VisualPun Human]], LittleBitBeastly, BeastMan, FunnyAnimal, SpeechImpairedAnimal, and Dog.[[note]]Pictured: Music/SnoopDogg, [[Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi Kotaro Inugami]], [[Myth/EgyptianMythology Anubis]], [[ComicBook/{{Horndog}} Bob the Dog]], Franchise/ScoobyDoo, and ''[[GratuitousLatin Canis lupus familiaris]]''.[[/note]]]]
7%%
8->''"Here is a thought! Who amongst you have seen the sight of man turned beast? A hapless few, we trust!...And yet...though we are repelled at the sight of man turned beast...we revel to see beast turned man! When you pass along this thought...remember you saw it in '''Mad!'''...And now, our story..."''
9-->-- '''Magazine/{{Mad}} #19'''[='=]s introduction to their "Mickey Rodent" story
10
11{{Anthropomorphic| Personification}} means, loosely translated, Humanlike. Since there are many humanlike characters in fiction (for [[MostWritersAreHuman obvious reasons]]), this page is here to make it clearer what the differences between different levels of anthropomorphism are.
12
13When people talk about the term "anthropomorphic", they usually refer to an animal, plant, alien, mythical or fantasy creature, robot, inanimate object, or other non-human that acts human or is humanoid in shape. The term "anthropomorphic" is also sometimes used more narrowly to refer to anything "of human shape or form".
14
15The pertinent terms are:
16* '''Anthropomorphic''': This general term refers to anything non-human with ''human'' characteristics, typically in terms of shape or form.
17* '''Zoomorphic''': This term refers to something of ''animal'' shape or form.
18* '''Anthrozoomorphic''': This is the technical term for animals that act human.
19
20Note that the differences are often rather ambiguous. Some characters could actually fit into multiple categories. Things can get [[MindScrew even weirder]] when trying to categorize an AnimateInanimateObject on this list. Also see AnthropomorphicPersonification, for when ''abstract concepts'' are depicted as being human-like characters.
21
22----
23!Sliding Scales of Anthropomorphism
24[[foldercontrol]]
25
26[[folder:Animals]]
27Let's start with animals, one of the most common types of anthropomorphism and zoomorphism. Anthropomorphic and zoomorphic animals cover a vast ground, ranging from animals with a few human-like characteristics, to looking like humans with a few animal-like characteristics.\
28\
29{{Beast Fable}}s feature animals that range from {{Nearly Normal Animal}}s, to {{Funny Animal}}s. These are OlderThanDirt, which means, in the oldest versions, it's hard to tell if the original teller saw actual animals as equal to people, or saw them as humanoid versions of animals; a character may behave as a human one minute and a TalkingAnimal the next.
30----
31!!Sliding Scale of Animal Anthropomorphism
32[[index]]
33[floatboxright:
34'''Also see:'''
35* '''AnimalTropes'''
36* AnimalAnthropomorphismTropes
37** FunnyAnimalTropes
38*** FunnyAnimalAnatomy
39** WerebeastTropes
40]
41* '''[[MostWritersAreHuman Human]]''': Just an ordinary, run of the mill human. This is what you need to be to be on this site. [[WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls Superintelligent chimps]] are NOT supposed to be given internet privileges, so any of those should go back to their cages ''right now''![[note]]Just kidding, y'all welcome here.[[/note]]
42* '''LittleBitBeastly''': These are on the lower end, they are practically human in every way, if your eyes never reach the top of their head where their ears are, or if you miss that tail behind them. In other words, if you wore a pair of fake bunny ears you'd look like one. [[FurriesAreEasierToDraw Artistic laziness issues]] are almost never in the cards for this, unless the animal characteristics are used to distinguish a character in a world of OnlySixFaces; usually this is due to RubberForeheadAlien or PlanetOfHats, because reality is boring. Of course there are other [[AuthorAppeal reasons]] this might show up.
43** '''{{Catgirl}}s''' are a sub-trope. The Eastern versions usually just give females the ears and sometimes the tail of whatever animal they supposedly are and males are {{Beast M|an}}en (though of course there might be exceptions), along with a very few defining characteristics and [[AnimalStereotypes a personality that matches their animal]].
44* '''Borderline LittleBitBeastly''': Take a human, give them a non-human head, and there you go. Alternatively, a LittleBitBeastly person with a furry skin and/or an animal nose or muzzle. The cast of ''Webcomic/CucumberQuest'' is a good example.
45* '''BeastMan''': Take a human (anyone is allowed, despite the trope name), give them some animal traits, and you get this trope. The Japanese word, ''Jyūjin'' translates directly into this, being a zoomorphic human. A ''kemono'' looks as humanoid as this trope, but is an anthropomorphic animal. FurriesAreEasierToDraw comes into play, as they don't have difficult-to-draw human faces, but the obviously human traits make the characters less alien to the audience, making them easier to take seriously. Plus using multiple species makes a cast easier to differentiate, a bonus in media that suffer from OnlySixFaces. Women will of course have [[TertiarySexualCharacteristics the obvious sign]] that they are female. Tends to come with:
46** '''IntelligentGerbil''': Often is a science-fiction/fantasy method of [[CharacterizationTropes characterization]] for BeastMan. These are aliens/fantasy races who are, by amazing coincidence, [[InexplicableCulturalTies like earth animals]], which is reflected culturally and behaviorally.
47* '''Borderline BeastMan''': This is for characters who don't quite fit into either BeastMan or FunnyAnimal. Usually, they're a character who can trace their ancestry back to an Earth animal, however they're treated more as a distinct species rather than as an animal that acts human--if you're confused, consider that birds evolved from dinosaurs so you can technically say that they're the same animal, although you probably think of them as different ones. It can also be seen as {{justified|Trope}} IntelligentGerbil, where you have BeastMan characters explained as the result of HollywoodEvolution (either an alternate timeline with alternate evolutionary paths, or the setting is [[AfterTheEnd in the far future after humans are gone]], or [[LegoGenetics genetic manipulation]]). Cat from ''Series/RedDwarf'' is a good example: He's the result of domesticated cats evolving over 3 million years, but he has very little in common with the animal that's his distant ancestor. More importantly, it's not possible to replace Cat with a human like you could if he was a FunnyAnimal, since one main plot point of ''Red Dwarf'' is that all the humans are dead.
48* '''FunnyAnimal''': This is where we hit characters who could be human, but aren't. Like BeastMan above FurriesAreEasierToDraw might be the reason, but it's more often because animals appeal to the target audience more, the writers are exploring a WhatIf scenario on how a {{world|OfFunnyAnimals}} might be different from ours, or to have [[FurryLens social commentary that isn't too on the nose]]. Most, or even all, of their mannerisms are that of a human: Imagine if your pet does everything you do - eating, talking, cooking, sleeping, working - and you should get the idea. WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse is a terrific example. He is a character who is so humanized you could replace him with a human and the plot would be nearly identical. He always wears clothes, he goes to work and lives in a house, and... [[FurryConfusion he has a pet dog]]. This term hails from the golden age of comics. As there can be some confusion between this and BeastMan above, ask yourself this question: ''Are they considered to be a cat/dog/lizard or are they considered to be a distinct species in their own right?'' If the former, then it's likely FunnyAnimal, if the latter, it's likely Beast Man.
49** '''HumanoidFemaleAnimal''': What happens when you combine FunnyAnimal or CivilizedAnimal with BizarreSexualDimorphism. The older females will (almost) always be a step or two closer to human than the males are. At the lower end, they may have long hair or NonMammalMammaries. Where there are bigger differences, they may be a step higher up the scale from males. If a show focuses on {{Funny Animal}}s or {{Civilized Animal}}s, expect the female(s) to be humanoid if they aren't already. If the main cast are {{Beast M|an}}en then the girl will be LittleBitBeastly or borderline LittleBitBeastly. Cleo the cat from ''WesternAnimation/HeathcliffAndTheCatillacCats'' is a great example.
50* '''CivilizedAnimal''': This is an intermediary stage between animals who talk and animals who might as well be human. They generally have half the mannerisms of a human and half the mannerisms of the animal. WesternAnimation/BugsBunny would be an excellent example: he lives in a hole in the forest and is hunted by Elmer Fudd -- and he stands upright, wears WhiteGloves, and tries to take vacations to Aruba. Brian the dog in ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' is this trope; he drinks martinis, walks on two legs and goes to college but also barks at people, scratches his butt on the carpet and so forth. [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Twilight Sparkle]] and her friends go here too: they live in houses, are the top of civilization with technology and magic ... and walk on all fours and eat hay. Its seminal use in literature is ''Literature/TheWindInTheWillows''... Which is itself [[FurryConfusion rather confusing]] at some points (Toad lives in a splendid old Hall, Mole lives in a hole in the ground).
51** '''MouseWorld''' is a sub-trope of CivilizedAnimal in which intelligent, well-dressed animals live on the fringes of humanity. Beatrix Potter's ''[[Literature/TheTaleOfPeterRabbit Peter Rabbit]]'' tales are another example.
52** '''CockroachesWillRuleTheEarth''' is when a new, generally small species takes over after humans are gone.
53** '''UpliftedAnimal''' is usually here - it's an animal that can talk THANKS TO SCIENCE! or sometimes MAGIC.
54* '''PartiallyCivilizedAnimal''': This is the intermediary stage between the NearlyNormalAnimal / SpeechImpairedAnimal / TalkingAnimal level (animals who are still unarguably animals, and have mostly animal behavior) and the CivilizedAnimal level. Generally, the majority of the mannerisms are that of the animal. Examples include the cats and dogs of, well, ''Film/CatsAndDogs'' and the owls of the ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheGuardiansTheOwlsOfGahoole''.
55* '''TalkingAnimal''': This is an animal who can talk as well as a normal human, and who can communicate with humans. However, they still are unarguably animals, and usually have mostly animal behavior (the humans might not like what such animals have to say about them). They may occasionally act more human-like if the need (and RuleOfFunny / RuleOfCool) calls for it. Examples include ''Series/{{Dinotopia}}'s'' Ambassador Bix the Protoceratops, TV's Series/MisterEd, and the animal denizens of Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia and the Literature/LandOfOz.
56** '''SpeechImpairedAnimal''': An animal who can't quite talk (at least not without heavy quirks), but is definitely of above-animal intelligence and usually capable of relatively efficient communication. There can and often will be misunderstandings. Like {{Talking Animal}}s, they may occasionally act more human-like if the need (and RuleOfFunny / RuleOfCool) calls for it. Franchise/ScoobyDoo is practically the TropeMaker. Franchise/{{Pokemon}} and other creatures that "speak" to humans in nonhuman languages also fit here.
57* '''NearlyNormalAnimal''': An animal that is very much an animal, particularly when it comes to thought processes, personality, instincts, priorities, and motivations.
58** '''Largely Normal Animals''': An animal who clearly has thought processes, but doesn't talk freely with humans. LNA characters may talk to each other, essentially [[AnimalTalk having their own language]], but humans won't understand them. That is, unless they [[SpeaksFluentAnimal Speak Fluent Animal]] or if the language can be learned. Their thought processes and personality are still very much like that of whatever animal they are. Many of them are able to make human-like arm and hand gestures and some can even grasp objects as if they have opposable thumbs. Bipedal characters qualify if their species can at least ''stand'' on its hind legs in RealLife (e.g squirrels, meerkats). The cast of ''WesternAnimation/WatershipDown'' and the original four legged ''ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}'' fit here. So do Mickey Mouse's dog WesternAnimation/{{Pluto| The Pup}}, the original four legged Snoopy from ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}, and ComicBook/KryptoTheSuperdog.
59** '''Mostly Normal Animals''': basically normal animals that have been given clear thought processes as well as a few human or some or several [[AllAnimalsAreDogs doglike]] characteristics (greater frequency of uttering sounds, human-like expressions) that still don't retract from their animal-ness. These animals don't talk. They can talk in AnimalTalk within species, but not between species. These animals don't go beyond being able to make human-like arm or hand gestures sometimes.They stay on all four legs if they are four-legged animals. They are between Largely Normal Animal and Almost Normal Animal.
60** '''Almost Normal Animals''': basically normal animals that have been given very few human or a few [[AllAnimalsAreDogs doglike]] characteristics (greater frequency of uttering sounds, human-like expressions) that don't retract from their animal-ness but allow audience not well versed in the way of animal behaviour to understand what's going on in the animal's mind. Can be merely a result of bad research, or completely intended. Like [=MNAs=], these animals don't talk, not even in AnimalTalk. They don't make human-like arm or hand gestures and they stay on all four legs if they're four-legged animals. Mostly seen in works aimed at children.
61* '''Animals''': They're treated as just that in the work. [[RuleOfFunny As a joke, they will understand everything characters say.]]
62[[/index]]
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Extraterrestrials]]
66[[index]]
67[floatboxright:
68'''Also see:'''
69* '''AlienTropes'''
70]
71* '''[[MostWritersAreHuman Human]]''': Again, this is what you ''probably'' are.
72* '''TransplantedHumans''': These aliens actually ''are'' humans, and they look like humans, and for the most part they act like humans. It's just that some AncientAstronauts or somesuch whisked them away from Earth a long time ago. They might have a difference or two, but this is usually explained away as being cultural (if it's a body modification or a way of doing things), genetic engineering, or (if they were transplanted long enough ago) just evolution.
73** '''TranshumanAliens''': If these characters look just like normal humans, save for a few noticeable physical differences like [[ArtificialLimbs mechanical]] or [[LegoGenetics biological]] embellishments, it's because they ''are'' normal humans. They're just altered somehow. In older fiction they tend to be involuntarily altered [[WasOnceAMan mooks with sad backstories]], but are becoming increasingly popular as benevolent characters who have [[CyberPunk chosen to be altered]] in hard sci-fi (certainly the [[PostCyberpunk increasing acceptance]] of body art and modification has something to do with this). The fun part is that they may physically resemble any of the other categories on this page...
74* '''HumanAliens''': Aliens that look just like people. They may look a ''little'' different, they might have BizarreAlienBiology, or super advanced technology, or some form of superpowers, but no person would be able to tell the difference. [[Series/DoctorWho Gallifreyans]] , [[ComicBook/{{Superman}} Kryptonians]] and [[Film/TheRockyHorrorPictureShow Transylvanians]] (not ''those '' [[{{Uberwald}} Transylvanians]] ) are perfect examples.
75* '''RubberForeheadAliens''': The extraterrestrial sister trope of BeastMan, Rubber Forehead Aliens have only one or two major characteristics that makes them different from humans. What makes them different, however, is that they don't bear semblance to any animal. They might {{justif|ied trope}}y this by saying that they have a common ancestor with or are somehow descended from humans. This usually comes from [[CoconutSuperpowers budget limitations]], so you are more likely to see this in live action than in animation. [[Franchise/StarTrek Klingons and Vulcans]] are widely-known examples.
76** '''GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe''': Alien as CuteMonsterGirl. She may be slightly physically different from an Earthling. For example, the women of [[Recap/StarTrekS1E0TheCage Orion]] or [[Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy2014 Zehoberei]]; the two examples also illustrate that similar appearance does not equal similar temperament.
77* '''{{Intelligent Gerbil}}s''': and other {{Beast M|an}}en - This is where they would go on the Alien-specific scale, as they are still human-like enough.
78* '''LittleGreenMen''': Not often seen in modern fiction. These guys are usually less humanlike in appearance, but still retain humanlike personality traits. They're even [[UglyCute kind of cute]] sometimes.
79* '''LizardFolk''': They can be anything from RubberForeheadAliens to stranger variations of HumanoidAliens, usually straddling the line right here between humanoid and animalistic. They are obviously based on a group of terrestrial animals, but they tend to follow a set of traits that have no specific parallel among Earth creatures. For example, the [[Recap/StarTrekS1E18Arena Gorn]] -- and [[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant no, it's not]] '''that''' kind of {{Gorn}}.
80* '''TheGreys''': Essentially the alien version of TheFairFolk. They look mostly human -- but their psychology is [[BlueAndOrangeMorality very, very unlike a human's]]...
81* '''HumanoidAliens''': Essentially anything else that has the same basic body structure as a human (one head, two arms, two legs, upright walking posture).
82* '''{{Cephalothorax}} and WaddlingHead Aliens''': Still has one head, two arms, two legs and an upright walking posture but lacking any distinctive torso so it can't really be called "Humanoid". Belongs either here or before StarfishAliens for the weirder examples.
83* '''InsectoidAliens''': These are pretty much exactly what they sound like, and are especially popular non-humanlike aliens. There's something distinctively alien about an insect from a human point of view, so why not scale them up? They tend to have a [[HiveCasteSystem hive-like social structure]], with a few human-like personality touches, and may even be vaguely humanoid in appearance too.
84* '''StarfishAliens''': ''Really'' Alien Aliens. And given the awe-inspiring variety of life on our planet, it's not unlikely that these are closest to what's really out there.
85** '''OctopoidAliens''': Tentacled non-skeletal aliens resembling terrestrial cephalopods. Most humans wonder if they're aliens to begin with, so why not include them to add to their non-humanness?
86** '''EnergyBeings''': Aliens that don't even have the decency to take on a physical form for us humans to relate to. Occasionally can be the following category at the same time as well (such as Aphoom Zah, Cthugha and Tru'nembra from the Franchise/CthulhuMythos).
87* '''EldritchAbomination''': These are sort of off the scale altogether: Aliens that are '''so''' alien, they tend to break the brain of a mere human, who was probably expecting something more along the lines of [[Franchise/StarTrek Lt. Worf]].
88[[/index]]
89[[/folder]]
90
91[[folder:Plants]]
92[[index]]
93[floatboxright:
94'''Also see:'''
95* '''PlantTropes'''
96]
97* '''[[MostWritersAreHuman Human]]''': Again, this is what you are; all humans are members of the animal kingdom after all.
98* '''GreenThumb''': This is when an organism has plant powers of their own. Usually some sort of DifferentlyPoweredIndividual.
99* '''NatureSpirit''': A totemic spirit, or AnthropomorphicPersonification like Nymphs, Dryads and MotherNature.
100* '''PlantPerson''': Instead of just controlling the plants, the person is half-human and half-plant. Think a BeastMan with leaves and chlorophyll instead of ears and fur. ''WesternAnimation/DarkwingDuck'' villain Bushroot fits squarely here, as does Franchise/{{Batman}} character Poison Ivy.
101* '''PlantAliens''': When the plant-creature comes from another world.
102* '''{{Planimal}}''': A plant-''animal'' hybrid.
103* '''WiseTree''': A talking tree.
104* '''TheTreesHaveFaces''': Trees with faces on their trunks, which may often be immobile and simply patterns of holes or knots.
105* '''ManEatingPlant''': Plants that are vicious and will attack, may overlap with {{Planimal}}.
106* '''WhenTreesAttack''': Like the above, but instead are basically just trees. May include a face and have branches for arms, roots for legs and leaves for hair, but doesn't truly look like anything in the Animal Kingdom.
107* '''Inanimate, sentient plants''': These plants are incapable of movement, but are still aware of their surroundings and can even feel pain. Sometimes it's a particularly horrifying variation of ForcedTransformation; a person is [[{{Transflormation}} turned into a mere plant]], but [[AndIMustScream still possesses enough consciousness to know what is happening to them, unable to do anything]].
108* '''Inanimate Plants''': The plants are in no way sentient, and are simply treated like that in the work.
109[[/index]]
110[[/folder]]
111
112[[folder:Robots]]
113Anthropomorphism can even be applied to machinery, robots in particular. All kinds of intelligent computers have something in common with both ends of the scale.
114----
115[[index]]
116[floatboxright:
117'''Also see:'''
118* '''RobotRollCall'''
119]
120* '''[[MostWritersAreHuman Human]]''': [[OverlyLongGag Yet again]], this is what you are. Of course, some of you may have a pacemaker or a couple of artificial ribs or something, or even an artificial limb, but when it starts encroaching on the below territory, you get a...
121* '''{{Cyborg}}''': Human, but with artificial components - they tend to blend with the Transhumans (see Extraterrestrials folder above). They can range from relatively small replacement parts (Geordi [=LaForge=]'s eyes in the ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' movies) to complete body replacement with few biological components left, with varying degrees of human appearance (from [[Franchise/GhostInTheShell major Motoko Kusanagi]] to Film/RoboCop2).
122** '''FullConversionCyborg''': The aforementioned "complete body replacements". Cyborgs with only a few flesh organs remaining, they range from appearing human on the surface, to looking completely robotic at first glance.
123* '''RidiculouslyHumanRobots''': Robots that look and act pretty human, often unnecessarily so. So human, in fact, that sometimes it's hard to distinguish them from real humans. Examples include T-800 from the ''Franchise/{{Terminator}}'' series.
124** '''ArtificialHuman''': Mostly biological humans developed by artificial means, but still considered advanced robots. They usually transcend regular humans in terms of strength and sometimes intelligence. Examples include the Replicants from ''Film/BladeRunner''.
125** '''{{Robot Kid}}s''': Robots that are designed to be children. ''Manga/AstroBoy'' is an example.
126** '''{{Robot Girl}}s''': Robots with the appearance of a human female.
127* '''UncannyValley Robots''': Robots which are almost human, but miss the mark in a few key places, causing people to pick up on the "devil in the details" and regard them as just plain ''[[NightmareFuel creepy]]''. It is harder to depict these kinds of characters in animation due to the stylization that comes with it.
128* '''Androids''': Robots which have a human-like body type, but are obviously mechanical in nature. Examples include all kinds of [[HumongousMecha mechs]], 90% of Franchise/{{Transformers}}, and ASIMO.
129** '''{{Fembot}}s''': These are specific android robots that are designed to be female.
130** '''HumongousMecha''': Gigantic robots with a humanoid shape, which may or may not be autonomous/sentient (though they're usually depicted as being manned vehicles).
131* '''TinCanRobot''': Robot with a round or cylindrical body. Usually not painted and with clearly seen bolts.
132* '''RobotBuddy''': Robots with characteristics of humans or animals, usually with animal-like or human-like (but not [[UncannyValley too human-like]]) body shape. Examples include R2-D2 from ''Franchise/StarWars''.
133** '''RobotDog''': Robots with the characteristics of dogs.
134* '''StarfishRobots''': Robots are still sentient, but either have characteristics of invertebrates or ones not based on any terrestrial creature.
135* '''{{Sapient Tank}}s and {{Sapient Ship}}s''': The very edge of what is usually allotted sentience, these are robots and machines that are built very clearly as ''machines'', sometimes being little more than boxes on threads, and oftentimes being vehicles with integrated AIs. Intellect ranges all over the scale, from being smarter than humans to being little more than glorified attack drones, [[{{Xenofiction}} but their unique circumstances tend to make them difficult to relate with humanity]], at least from a physical perspective.
136* '''{{Spider Tank}}s''' and other mechanoid creatures: This is where robots cease to be individually self-conscious. Examples include all kinds of robotic spiders and insects who are still mobile. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E-bDmMCwsig This]] is one of the examples.
137* '''Industrial robots''': These robots are usually immobile and mounted to one place and can consist of a single robotic arm or even simpler structure, with only a limited set of behaviors or functions. All kinds of {{Sentry Gun}}s commonly found in shoot 'em ups and other video game genres belong here.
138* '''GreyGoo''' and other amorphous mechanical stuff: At this point robots become so non-humanlike that it CrossesTheLineTwice and becomes [[MechanicalAbomination creepy again]]. They start having some extremely weird characteristics.
139[[/index]]
140[[/folder]]
141
142[[folder:Miscellaneous]]
143Other types of anthropomorphic characters that don't exactly fit with the other categories above.
144----
145[[index]]
146[floatboxright:
147'''Also see:'''
148* '''ThisIndexHasAMindOfItsOwn'''
149** SlidingScaleOfLivingToys
150]
151* '''{{Animate Inanimate Object}}s''' are pretty much any non-living, physical entities that move, look, and behave like living creatures do, including both naturally-occurring objects (like rocks or water), and man-made items (though if it's some sort of machine, just look at the Robots folder above).
152* '''{{Anthropomorphic Personification}}s''' are beings which represent various forces of nature, or abstract concepts in human culture. Many mythological deities and spirits personify something, for example [[TheGrimReaper Death]].
153[[/index]]
154[[/folder]]

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