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    Sauron 

    Sentinels 

The Sentinels

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sentinel_mkiv_x_men_marvel_comics_robot_h1.jpg
"Surrender mutant!"

Debut: X-Men #14 (1965)

"To a mutant, Ororo—Sentinel's another name for death!"—Banshee

    Shadow King 

The Shadow King

Amahl Farouk (maybe)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/shadowking.gif

Nationality: Egyptian

Species: Abstract Entity

Debut: Uncanny X-Men #117 (1979)

Ah, such heroic sentiments. I like that — but this is my game, my parlor, my rules. Here the house always wins!


A vastly powerful psychic entity that likes to possess people and bring out their darker emotions. Professor X met him as Egyptian crimelord Amahl Farouk, and killed his human body in a psychic-showdown. Farouk was the first evil mutant Xavier encountered, prompting him to form the X-Men. However, it has been since revealed that the Shadow King might have existed long before possessing Farouk.

A live-action iteration of the Shadow King appears as the Big Bad of the 2017 television series Legion, played by Navid Negahban. Tropes and ideas from his character were also borrowed from the movie counterpart of Apocalypse from the 2016 film X-Men: Apocalypse.
  • Aborted Arc: The original plan for the Shadow King under Chris Claremont not only had him as the Final Boss for the X-Men as a whole, but actually killing Professor X in their final battle, which would have resulted in Magneto becoming the permanent new leader of the X-Men. The power struggle over the direction of the X-Men title that led to Claremont's departure from the book caused the story to come to an ending much sooner than Claremont wanted it to. As such, a slew of plot points from his plans for the character were cut short:
    • Shadow King would be revealed to be the mastermind behind both the Hellfire Club and the Reavers; in particular Shadow King would be the true architect behind the Days of Future Past dystopian future (and create the Hounds off of memories of encountering a timelost Rachel Summers) and Dark Phoenix Saga, with it revealed that he had Mastermind corrupt Jean Grey so he could take her as a host body when she became the Black Queen.
    • Through the Reavers, Shadow King controlled Gateway, a mystic Aborigine who was guardian over a sacred spot of land where his ancestors spirits dwelt and had been turned into the Reavers (and later X-Men) headquarters. And through Legion on Muir Island, had Polaris under his control and intended to use her and Gateway to access Aborigine Dreamtime, allowing Shadow King control over the entire universe via controlling the dreams of all sentient life in existence.
    • Shadow King would also have designs on Rogue as a possible new host body as Shadow King found himself unable to continue to maintain the life functions of the dead FBI inspector he was using as his main host body at the time, with it implied that the Shadow King was working with a corrupted Moria McTaggart to find a way to activate every power Rogue ever absorbed to make him all powerful.
  • Adaptational Badass: Both of the adaptations of the Shadow King mentioned above are this compared to the original.
  • Always a Bigger Fish: During X-Men: Worlds Apart Storm lured him into a trap set by herself and Bast the Panther God, who promptly devours him.
  • Arch-Enemy: To Storm. He employed her as a thief when she was a child, but was never able to completely bend her to his will. Her strength of character makes her his favorite target.
    • He considers Professor X to be his archenemy, owing to Chuck dealing him a pretty decisive defeat in their first encounter.
  • As Long as There Is Evil: Shadow King fits this trope to the letter, especially following the retcon that he might be an ancient demonic being, and not the psychic remains of an evil mutant.
  • Author Appeal: One of the reasons Claremont uses him so frequently is Shadow King's modus operandi are tropes Claremont just loves.
  • Battle in the Center of the Mind: Frequently does this with telepaths.
  • Big Bad Wannabe: The Shadow King considers himself the Final Boss to Charles Xavier and the X-Men as a whole, but falls a little short of that goal. He does not play well with others, doing villain team-ups only when forced into them, and power-wise he's never quite been able to equal his hated rival.
  • Bond Villain Stupidity: Being one of the older X-villains, he snuggles in this trope like a security blanket. Excepting Professor X, for whom It's Personal between him and Farouk, the Shadow King never tries to outright kill his targets, preferring instead to break them or gloat at them. Unsurprisingly, the heroes turn the tide on him every time, only for him to come back the next time none the wiser.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: Would you really except any less from someone who calls themselves the Shadow King?
  • The Corrupter: Prides himself on being this, though he's less about tempting his victims to evil and more about twisting their minds through brute telepathic force until they're corrupt enough for his taste.
  • Crippling Overspecialization: The reason behind his long string of defeats. Despite being theoretically a telepath in the same league as Professor X, the Shadow King is much more interested in tormenting his targets than simply defeating them, and while he's not weak, he definitely leans more towards finesse than force. Lesser telepaths like Psylocke have still managed to take him down because they go for the jugular while he plays around, and he's never dared to challenge the stronger villain telepaths like Exodus or Madelyne Pryor, likely knowing they'd crush him like a roach.
  • Dark Is Evil: His astral form is frequently depicted as a sinister shadowy being and Farouk is evil as the day is long.
  • Depending on the Writer:
    • His threat and power level tends to vary a lot. This is usually explained as that, being a parasite, he's only as strong as whatever he's feeding of on.
    • The nature of his mind control. When Claremont's at the helm, it's More than Mind Control, releasing all those dark feelings everyone has that they'd never really act upon. With pretty much everyone else, it's just straight-up mind control.
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?:
    • Shadow King's possession of people is often strongly reminiscent of depression.
    • Addiction as well. It hijacks your free will, makes you think you want something while in actuality it's something else driving you and it leaves you a hollowed out, broken person.
  • Embodiment of Vice: To the point of warping and distorting any physical body he inhabits; see Villainous Glutton below.
  • Emotion Eater: Specifically, hate. During the Muir Island Saga, he generates a Hate Plague via Polaris to boost his powers.
  • Evil Counterpart: To Professor X, who would develop a similar parasitic psychic entity to Farouk's in the form of Onslaught.
  • Evil Mentor: During Vita Alaya's run on New Mutants, he's revealed to have taken No-Girl, Anole, Cosmar and Rain Boy under his wing and there is no way that is a good thing.
    • In the same book it's revealed that The Shadow King was this for Ferouk, coming to him as a child and teaching him how to use his powers to help people.
  • Eviler than Thou: Subjected to this by Apocalypse.
  • Fat Bastard: Farouk has no physical body, but his Villainous Glutton tendencies end up in any body he inhabits inevitably degrading to this state.
  • Fate Worse than Death: Being possessed by him. As revealed by Karma, victims are completely aware the whole time, unable to stop Farouk from his systematic degradation of their bodies and, indeed, are suffering from ceaseless psychological torture in their own heads as Farouk works to make them empty shells. The harder a victim fights back, the more Farouk enjoys it and the longer he draws out their suffering.
  • Gender Bender: Happily possessed Karma for months in New Mutants and has frequent designs on doing this to Storm too.
  • God Guise: At one point he posed as Anansi, one of the Orisha of African folklore.
  • Hijacked by Ganon: As seen in Aborted Arc, didn't pan out. Raised again in Resurrection of Magneto, when he suggests he is the Helm of Annihilation, but when Storm calls him out on this admits that it's not true.
  • I Have You Now, My Pretty: Clearly this is kind of Farouk's shtick.
    • Really likes to torment Storm. One miniseries, Worlds Apart, revolved around him trying to break her to his will.
    • He also tried turning Psylocke and Rogue into his "Shadow Queens" at separate times.
    • Also Karma in New Mutants.
    • And Val Cooper in the lead-in to the Muir Island Saga.
  • Living Shadow: If the Shadow King ever had an original body, he lost that long ago.
  • The Man Behind the Man: Was revealed to be the secret founder and master of the Hellfire Club during the Crosstime Capers, though this was never followed up on due to Claremont leaving the X-Men books, and every writer since has pretty firmly ignored it. Shadow King was also supposed to be the benefactor of the original Reavers and due to later retcons, behind Legion going evil and enslaving Muir Island/imprisoning Polaris.
  • Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: As part of his Multiple-Choice Past, he may be the disembodied astral presence of a very old mutant, or he may be some sort of malevolent extraplanar entity that was never anything resembling a flesh-and-blood being. Which one is more likely tends to be at the whims of whoever is writing him.
  • More than Mind Control: His preferred method of turning people against each other is by awakening the real doubts and insecurities in their minds, making them that much harder to get through to.
  • Multiple-Choice Past: Some stories have portrayed the Shadow King as a centuries-old mutant who survived the years by jumping from body to body and eventually possessed Amahl Farouk. In others, he was merely born Amahl Farouk and fabricated a grander backstory for himself. A few have portrayed him as some sort of extraplanar Ancient Evil that was never remotely human or mutant to begin with.
  • Names to Run Away from Really Fast: You don't get much more Obviously Evil than the Shadow King.
  • Nepharious Pharaoh: Has some elements of this, as his original form and/or host body of Amahl Farouk was Egyptian and was modeled after a certain Egyptian king.
  • No Celebrities Were Harmed: He physically resembles and shares the same name as King Farouk of Egypt.
  • Parasitic Immortality: The Shadow King has kept himself alive for millennia by possessing different hosts, including the mutants Amahl Farouk, Xuan Cao Manh, and David Haller.
  • Piggybacking on Hitler: During the 1930s he worked for two of Hitler's most trusted agents, one of them being the future Baron Strucker.
  • Psychic Powers: Strong enough to rival, though not defeat, Professor X.
    • Astral Projection: As a being that exists purely on the astral plane, this is his default method of combat.
    • Demonic Possession: Doubles with Grand Theft Me; Farouk can only act in the physical world by taking control of a human host.
    • Emotion Control: Put it this way, Farouk has sometimes been known to spread a Hate Plague just by being around.
    • Mind Control: He can do it in several ways.
    • People Puppets: Tends to reduce everyone in his immediate vicinity to this.
    • Slave Mooks: He often brainwashes whatever local populace is in his immediate vicinity, resulting in the heroes having to fight a horde of innocent bystanders.
    • Telepathy: Has telepathic powers on par with those of Professor X.
  • Sadist: As mentioned above, he's the very definition of a psychic sadist. He won't torture your body, but he'll Mind Rape you with glee until you're an Empty Shell.
  • Sealed Evil in a Can: He's often sealed away into various things. In the Age of Apocalypse Apoc literally contained his essence inside of a small can with a sealed tube on top.
  • Sealed Inside a Person-Shaped Can: For awhile he was trapped inside Psylocke's mind. This prevented her from using her telepathic powers.
  • Staying Alive: He has near-Complete Immortality, boasting at one point that he can revive himself off one dark thought in one man's heart. See As Long as There Is Evil above.
  • Starter Villain:
    • He was literally this for Charles Xavier, being the first evil mutant Chuck ever met. The encounter was what convinced him of the necessity of a team like the X-Men.
    • Also for New Excalibur, as he and his Shadow X-Men are the first threat the team faces.
  • Strong as They Need to Be: A psychic variation. Shadow King is a psychic parasite who feeds off depression, so how strong he is tends to vary on how bad the mental state of his opponent is. He can affect anyone, but
  • Trapped in Another World: During the House of M storyline the Shadow King was not included as part of the Scarlet Witch's ideal world, but instead shunted off to another dimension. After the reality warp was undone he made his way back to the current one.
  • Uniqueness Value: Like Mojo above, it's been asserted that there's only one Shadow King within the Marvel Multiverse; the ones we've seen in realities besides Earth-616 are supposedly all the same entity manifesting in different ways or extensions of it in some kind of Hive Mind scenario.
  • Used to Be a Sweet Kid: Yes, believe it or not, Amahl Farouk was the son of a beloved merchant. As a boy in 16th Century Egypt, he would use his powers to protect the commoner citizens and idolized his father. But when his father fell to a plague he in turn fell prey to the Shadow King with promises he would Never Be Hurt Again.
  • Villainous Glutton: When he claims a human host for an extended period of time, he becomes addicted to eating, and his host becomes morbidly obese as a result.
  • Villains Act, Heroes React: Fighting him was what gave Professor X the idea to form the X-Men in the first place. Ironically, if this very loathsome villain didn't exist, neither would the X-Men.
  • We Can Rule Together: Gives Professor X this speech upon their first meeting; presumably it wasn't so cliché back then.

    Sugar Man 

Sugar Man

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sugarman.png

Species: Human mutant

Debut: Generation Next #2 (1995)

Must you scream, Nathan? I'm trying to work here.


A depraved mutant from the parallel universe known as the Age of Apocalypse, Sugar Man was one of the many camp bosses, running a gruesome concentration camp where he tormented thousands of slaves, human and mutant alike. His specialty was the study and creation of biological weaponry, and he earned his place in Apocalypse's regime by inventing horrific plagues and epidemics. In a cruel twist of fate, he is one of the few souls to survive the death of that twisted reality and escape to the mainstream universe.

He appears as a boss in X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse.


    Vargas 

Vargas

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/vargas_2.JPG

Nationality: Spanish

Species: Homo sapians superior

Debut: X-Treme X-Men #1

A mysterious man searching for Irene Adler's diaries who ends up clashing with the X-Men because he believes he is fated to die at the hands of one of them.


  • Arc Villain: He is the primary villain in 2001's X-treme X-Men initial story arc.
  • Ambiguously Human: Vargas is not a mutant, but he is also not fully human either. He claims to be the natural response of human evolution against mutantkind.
  • Badass Normal: His strength, speed and durability are at peak for human potential, and he manages to curbstomp Rogue and Beast in a fight.
  • BFS: His weapon of choice is a large broadsword.
  • C-List Fodder: While he might have killed a big league X-Man and was a pain in the ass to the X-Treme X-Men, when it comes to the large picture, he doesn't hold a candle to Apocalypse, Mr. Sinister, William Stryker, Cassandra Nova and many other enemies that the heroes faced, who threatened the world on regular basis. And as such he is killed off without ceremony just before Messiah Complex by the Marauders on Mr. Sinister's orders.
  • Dashing Hispanic: A very evil example, being a ruthless warrior of Hispanic background who not only holds his own against superpowered foes, but manages to overwhelm them. He has a tendency to drop Gratuitous Spanish.
  • Gratuitous Spanish: He tends to drop Spanish words a lot and in one infamous instance he uses Betsy's blood to write "pronto" (Spanish for "Done") in the wall above her corpse.
  • Hero Killer: The thing he is most famous for is killing Psylocke in a duel. He also very nearly killed Rogue, Gambit and Beast in other encounters.
  • Karmic Death: The reason why Sinister had Vargas executed was his possession of Destiny's diaries, as he wanted to silence everyone who had knowledge of the future. So the very object he used to avoid his own death was indirectly responsible for it, in a way he couldn't have predicted.
  • Killed Offscreen: Whether Rogue or the Marauders killed him, either way we never see his body.
  • Master Swordsman: A pretty dangerous one. His duel with Psylocke was pretty one-sided.
  • Only One Name: He's only known as Vargas, and it's not clear if that's his actual last name.
  • Screw Destiny: The reason why he is a thorn on the X-Men's side: Irene's diaries state he is fated to die at the hands of one, believed to be Rogue. And he wants to avoid that by any means necessary.
  • Transhuman: He claims to be a level of human evolution even higher than mutants, but we never find out if he's telling the truth.
  • Ultimate Life Form: He made the audacious claim that he is the next step in human evolution.
  • The Unreveal: During the final battle, Rogue had him pinned to the ground and ready to stab him with his own sword, but she hesitated because she didn't want to fulfill the prophecy and wanted to prove him wrong. It's unknown whether she spared or finished him off since the comic cuts way before that happens and the next panel showed her declaring that "it's over". She evidently spared him, as years later, Mr. Sinister sends his death squads to finish the job.
  • Worthy Opponent: Considered Psylocke to have been this moments before killing her.

    Vulcan 

Gabriel Summers / Vulcan

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/emperorvulcan.png

Aliases: Kid Vulcan, Emperor Vulcan, Majestor

Nationality: American

Species: Human mutant

Debut: X-Men: Deadly Genesis #1 (2006)

I claim D'Ken's throne as my own! By right of blood and combat! By right of succession! I name myself Emperor Vulcan, ruler of the Shi'ar Imperium!


A prisoner of Shi'ar experiments concealed on Earth, the experience awakened him to a Omega level mutant, but also drove him mad and filled him with an urge to devastate the Shi'ar, an urge he happily set about fulfilling once he realised how powerful he was. Ironically, he ended up becoming their ruler, even falling in love with the exiled Shi'ar princess, Deathbird, herself an outcast for being a mutant.

    Xarus 

Xarus / Shadow Colonel

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/2196852_xarus_01.jpg

Species: Vampire

Debut: Death of Dracula (2010)

The youngest son of Dracula, unhappy that humanity kept pushing vampires further and further into the darkness, he devised a coup against his own father and sets his eyes on world domination, starting by converting all mutants located in San Francisco to his cause.


  • Assassin Outclassin': Shortly after staking his father, Alyssa tried to have Xarus killed by sending three Siren vampires to seduce him. He managed to overpower them just in time when things started to get intimate.
  • Antagonistic Offspring: To his father.
  • Big Bad: In Curse of the Mutants.
  • The Casanova: Xarus is introduced with his girlfriend Alyssa around his arms, has no problem getting hooking up with three Siren ladies at the same time. Like father, like son.
  • Cain and Abel: He tried to get his eldest brother Janus killed for refusing to side with him in his coup.
  • Daywalking Vampire: Xarus manages to get the support of the vampires by having invented a light-bending device that allows them to walk under the sunlight.
  • Depending on the Artist: Artists never seen to agree whether he should have blonde or brown hair.
  • Eviler than Thou: Presents himself as such to Dracula, twice - the first time in earnest, the second time as a ruse on Dracula's behalf. Both times, despite a serious badass upgrade, he proves that he is nothing compared to his father.
  • The Evil Prince: Fits this trope like a glove since he wants to replace his father as the new vampire king, and get rid of any potential threats such as his brother Janus.
  • Karmic Death: He is beheaded by his resurrected father, whom he had previously staked and beheaded. Hilariously, it actually happens again when he reappears in the 2018 Avengers run, and Dracula casually lobs him over his shoulder.
  • New Era Speech:
    For centuries — centuries — we've been told we are damned! That we must live our lives in the dark, the world's dirty secret. That we are the corrupt shadows of humanity, undeserving of our own place in the light. And you — like my father over there — have accepted that. I say, by our own might, by the force of our will, we are redeemed! Together, united, we will reintroduce vampirekind to the world. And the world will tremble.
  • Unholy Matrimony: Originally used to be romantically involved with Alyssa, but she betrayed him too many times. He then decided to take Jubilee as his consort.
  • Vampire Monarch: What he aspired to become.
  • "Well Done, Son" Guy: He ultimately wants his dad's approval. At best, he gets mild amusement.

    X-Cutioner 

Carl Denti / X-Cutioner

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/x_cutioner.png
Carl Denti, X-Cutioner I

Nationality: American

Species: Human

Debut: Uncanny X-Men Annual #17 (1993)

"Villain", "hero", it's all a matter of perspective, wouldn't you say?


A Lawman Gone Bad who takes it upon himself to act as judge, jury and executioner for fugitive mutants. Not the Big Bad of the X-Cutioner's Song crossover, or even affiliated with it, despite what his handle might lead you to believe.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: Invokes this in his debut appearance, as seen with his profile quote above.
  • Brought to You By The Letter "X": His name was inspired by the X-Cutioner's Song, a 1992 X-books Bat Family Crossover that featured X-Force villain Stryfe as the titular X-Cutioner (though he was never called that on-panel). Evidently creator Scott Lobdell thought it was too cool a name to waste, as he gave it to this new character a year later.
  • Cowboy Cop: When the FBI couldn't apprehend a mutant (or he thought a jail cell wasn't enough) Denti would gear up and go after them as the X-Cutioner.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: In later appearances Denti became a Gambit villain, targeting the Ragin' Cajun for termination solely because Remy was able to defeat and humiliate him.
  • Fantastic Racism: Played with, as Denti himself does not hate mutants in general but recognizes how dangerous some of them are and is all too willing to work outside the law to deal with them. This naturally motivates him into becoming a Vigilante Man.
    • The second version hates all mutants, after his wife and son are killed in the crossfire of mutants fighting each other.
  • Follow the Leader: Denti is basically retread of The Punisher that targets mutants specifically, and was created when the Punisher's popularity was at an all-time high. This turns out to be true in-universe as well as out, with Denti meeting Frank and admitting to him that the Punisher was his inspiration for becoming the X-Cutioner. Ironically, Denti himself ended up serving as the inspiration for an even more deranged fellow, who has become the new X-Cutioner.
  • Heel–Face Turn: Denti eventually abandoned the X-Cutioner persona and returned to work as an FBI agent.
  • In the Hood: One of the more sensible examples in comics. Being a still-active FBI agent, Denti uses this to maintain his Secret Identity.
  • Karma Houdini: Despite (accidentally) murdering two kids he'd tricked into working for him, Denti is able to return to his old job without facing any charges.
  • Kick the Dog: Aside from his first kill, the mutant rapist Tower, Denti seems to go after mutants too weak or vulnerable to fight back. His next target after Tower is Mastermind, who was already in his literal deathbed thanks to the Legacy Virus, and after that was a wash he targeted Emma Frost, who was in a coma at the time. The main exception to this is Rogue, who had the powers she'd stolen from Carol Danvers, and he didn't initially back down when faced with both her and X-Man, who he actually gives a decent fight (it's worth noting that X-Man was exhausted from a long flight, a misunderstanding fight with Rogue, and was inexperienced with his malfunctioning powers), only teleporting out when both got their second wind.
  • Lawman Gone Bad: An FBI agent following in the footsteps of the Punisher.
  • Legacy Character: A second version of the X-Cutioner appeared in X-Men: Gold. This version is much more indiscriminate about who he kills, falling into the Would Hurt a Child category when he attacks the Jean Grey School.
  • Let No Crisis Go to Waste: The second X-Cutioner took advantage of a crisis involving the Darkhold to infiltrate the X-Mansion, plant explosives, and murder two students.
  • Military Brat: His family has a distinguished tradition of military service.
  • Murder Is the Best Solution: True to his name, the X-Cutioner did not try to arrest mutants, instead just opting for summary executions.
  • No Name Given: The second X-Cutioner was never named, even though he was eventually arrested (and presumably identified) by the NYPD.
  • Never My Fault: One of Denti's main character flaws. He's always blaming the X-Men for getting in his way, reasoning that they deserve death by not stepping aside to let him commit murder.
  • '90s Anti-Hero: You don't get much more nineties than The X-Cutioner (unless your name is Adam X the X-Treme).
  • The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: The main reason why he failed as a villain and was retired. Despite his whole identity being based around the concept of killing fugitive mutants, Denti's only kill over his entire villainous career was the aforementioned Tower. Every time he tried and failed to kill a target (most of whom were invalids unable to even defend themselves!) it took a little more wind out of his sails. By the time Gambit was mopping him up in his solo series, Denti was firmly in has-been territory.
  • Put on a Bus: Owing to the character's now-goofy handle, he's been pretty much banished back to the nineties that spawned him.
  • Sanity Slippage: Denti's father was revealed to have died from it, going nuts on a battlefield and having to be put down by his own men, and Denti himself suffers from it in later appearances, blurring his already vague sense of morality in the name of getting another kill under his belt.
  • Serial Killer: Unlike Denti, the second X-Cutioner never had any affiliation with the law, and was just a nutjob who decided that all mutants needed to die after his wife and son were (accidentally) killed in a mutant conflict.
  • Ungrateful Bastard: Archangel saves him from a nasty fall the first time they meet. Denti's way of saying 'thank you' is a taser to the face.
  • Vigilante Man: Rest assured, his mission of mutant execution did not come with an FBI mandate.
  • Viler New Villain: As mentioned above, the second X-Cutioner of X-Men Gold was a much more villainous character than Denti ended up being. He ended up killing 7 mutants in total, while the original X-Cutioner's body count stands at just a single mutant, and that kill was a mutant rapist who is missed by no one.
  • Where Does He Get All Those Wonderful Toys?: To the point of being a non-powered case of Power Copying — Denti uses his FBI connections to piece together a small arsenal of confiscated weaponry from the various extraterrestrials the X-Men have battled over the years. Archangel aptly describes him as a "walking medley of the X-Men's greatest villains".

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