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Trouble | Sat 28-Apr-07 08:42 AM |
Member since 10th Nov 2003
208 posts
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#17606, "Good Vs Evil balance"
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I'll be honest from start and say I have a bias toward playing good and occasionally neutral, PC's because I can't make myself be very evil. I'm just not that mean.
Some of the recent characters on the Battlefield have made me question the balance between good and evil in character strength, particularly PK's. If you look at 3 recent evils, Nuloh, Isabeaux and Kanaev, they account for nearly 700 pks between them and less than 100 deaths. Sorry I didn't add up the numbers, too lazy. When you look at the next 5 easily identifiable good characters, they account for maybe 100 pks and about 200 deaths. Is this just the recent tide or a more pervasive trend?
I realize that from a role-play perspective it's much easier to justify rampant killing by evils and to a certain degree this will attract a segment of the player population simply because of this. And certainly several of the most memorable pk'ers have been evil over the years. I'm just wondering about this from a game balance perspective.
Should evil be that much stronger than good? Is it just playing style that results in numbers like this or is it an imbalance in class skills? I'm guessing the Immortal staff has conversations about this fairly frequently but I'm wondering if there's a predilection towards evil characters among them as well and hence a bias in the game towards making evil a bit easier to get strong PC's with.
Just a philosophical question by the usual suspect.
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RE: Good Vs Evil balance,
Eshval,
01-May-07 09:02 AM, #17
Summary - Evil is kinky. nt,
GinGa,
01-May-07 10:26 AM, #18
I can do mischevious, but not outright evil,
Trouble,
01-May-07 06:58 PM, #19
Depends on how you view "powerful",
Twist,
01-May-07 11:26 PM, #21
RE: Depends on how you view,
Isildur,
02-May-07 12:03 AM, #22
Good points...,
Twist,
02-May-07 08:04 AM, #24
I'd like to edit this just a bit...,
Odrirg,
02-May-07 10:31 AM, #25
RE: I'd like to edit this just a bit...,
Isildur,
02-May-07 03:29 PM, #26
Pretty much...,
TheDude,
02-May-07 05:47 AM, #23
RE: Good Vs Evil balance,
Kastellyn,
30-Apr-07 02:26 PM, #12
Additional: RE: Preps,
GinGa,
30-Apr-07 03:42 PM, #13
When I played my first elf,
Quixotic,
30-Apr-07 04:15 PM, #14
My point (I'm ADD today, sorry),
Quixotic,
30-Apr-07 05:47 PM, #15
RE: When I played my first elf,
Isildur,
30-Apr-07 07:22 PM, #16
I support the right to arm Bears!,
Trouble,
01-May-07 07:11 PM, #20
Skilled players prefer evil,
Valkenar,
29-Apr-07 10:40 PM, #10
RE: Skilled players prefer evil,
Isildur,
30-Apr-07 12:43 AM, #11
RE: Good Vs Evil balance,
incognito,
28-Apr-07 10:39 AM, #4
Yay evils.,
Nivek1,
28-Apr-07 09:50 AM, #2
It's a class based bias to defense over offense,
GinGa,
28-Apr-07 08:59 AM, #1
Yhorian spreading misinfo on every board he touches,
A2,
28-Apr-07 10:38 AM, #3
He's not a 'tard,
incognito,
28-Apr-07 10:40 AM, #5
Guess I'm the tard,
A2,
28-Apr-07 10:51 AM, #6
RE: Guess I'm the tard,
Karel,
28-Apr-07 12:15 PM, #7
A thought about misinfo.,
GinGa,
28-Apr-07 02:45 PM, #8
It's somewhat simpler than that,
Sam,
29-Apr-07 02:30 AM, #9
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Eshval | Tue 01-May-07 09:02 AM |
Member since 22nd Aug 2004
519 posts
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#17647, "RE: Good Vs Evil balance"
In response to Reply #0
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My thoughts on the propensity of evil characters vs good characters is pretty simple, though it is obviously more complex and a socio-pyschological study could easily be made of the issue.
Most folks are inherently 'good' in real life. By this I mean we act in accordance with a set of social morals and societal strictures. Most folks defined as 'evil' are held in civil custody once they act out enough to become noticed. Bear in mind this is a grand generalization.
When offered the chance, many folks will step across to roleplay evil. It allows certain expressions that are denied in RL society...it allow us to be 'bad'. We can be those bullies that plagued us in school (or we can recapture our childhood glory because we were that bully). Our parents would be shocked if we behaved in an evil fashion, and as many of the player base in their 'rebellious' stage, this helps release the angst. Flat out, we can experience a sense of power and dominance and kick the crap out of folks rather than having to deal with them as 'reasonable' beings in a structured, controlled society.
There is a certain 'sinful' attaction to being the 'bad guy', and in many instances it allows us to vent our frustrations and feelings of impotence in a 'safe' environment.
Then again, maybe we just like being wicked.
eshval@carrionfields.com
A whole new day, a whole new set of possibilities. - MacGyver
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Trouble | Tue 01-May-07 06:58 PM |
Member since 10th Nov 2003
208 posts
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#17650, "I can do mischevious, but not outright evil"
In response to Reply #17
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I suspect you're probably right in that playing evil lets the 'dark' side of our persona free to do things that would be frowned upon in real life. I must be suffering from perpetual 'nice guy' syndrome in that I can't even be really mean to someone in the game unless they really, really deserve it.
But I also wonder if the game is not engineered to give that dark side a little more free reign to be wicked and to frankly be more powerful on an individual basis than the good-aligned.
The 2 PC builds with the greatest potential to PK on an individual basis are probably anti-paladins (i.e. Cabdru) and necromancers (Entropy lich). Even the rockin'est paladin couldn't stand toe to toe with characters of that ilk. They might be able to escape alive, but even that would be a challenge. I realize these are exceptional examples, but you get the gist. I think it is that potential, whether realized or not that attracts the power-pk'ers to the dark side. (For some reason I want to say 'Use the force, Luke').
Anyway, just some idle musings.
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Twist | Tue 01-May-07 11:26 PM |
Member since 23rd Sep 2006
3431 posts
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#17654, "Depends on how you view "powerful""
In response to Reply #19
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PKwins? Yeah ap, necro, hell even evil conjie (Kanaev as exhibit A in the evidence pool here) are nasty. And to be fair, that is definitely how most people view "most powerful" and "winning."
Lack of PKlosses? None of the above. Neutral healer, evil healer, good healer, in that order (and only because good healer is sorta required by RP to stick around to save his groupmates, while evil healer can be like "eff you guys.")
What I think *could* be a valid view of "powerful" is "makes his/her allies better" in which case bard, paladin, good healer, and transmuter win by far.
Or maybe it's "can raid enemy cabals solo" in which case Good conjie/Paladin is the shizzle, followed probably by shaman. When I played Meagara, I used to log in and if nobody was in range, I'd go take both the Scepter and Codex solo. If someone was in range, I'd typically head to their cabal to see if I could kill them and then raid solo. You can do that with AP as well, but you need a lot of preps to do it. Necro? You need to grab an army first.
I just think there is more than "sealing a pkwin and adding +1 to a counter" to overall winning. Meagara was 45/21 which isn't bad (despite what Shokai says *fistshake*) but was insanely valuable in group fights for her ability to summon and dispel and damn/curse. Did she get the pkwins in those battles? No, it was usually the warrior who was bashing/tripping and getting 6-8 attacks per round.
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Isildur | Wed 02-May-07 12:03 AM |
Member since 04th Mar 2003
5969 posts
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#17655, "RE: Depends on how you view"
In response to Reply #21
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>Or maybe it's "can raid enemy cabals solo" in which case Good >conjie/Paladin is the shizzle, followed probably by shaman.
I'd argue with shaman, depending on which cabals you're raiding. If you're a goodie shaman then you're basically a crappy paladin. Worse tanking, less melee, worse healing, less damage from demonfire compared to wrath. If you're evil, then some of the cabals you'd raid are tall orders. Watcher spams light of heaven and has an attack type that many evil shamans are vuln to. Archmage energy drains and mental knifes, which totally jacks your mana regen. (You also get no benefit from protection against the Archmage). Empire inners healing curse, plus all sorts of other maledictions. They might be the easiest, actually, since they don't do anything that would prevent you resting up between bouts.
I might put certain warrior builds above shaman, even without assuming highly-limited gear, as long as they can generate cash and purchase preps. If you assume wand use, then invoker, AP and offense-shifter all become viable. There's also bard.
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Odrirg | Wed 02-May-07 10:31 AM |
Member since 16th Oct 2004
431 posts
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#17662, "I'd like to edit this just a bit..."
In response to Reply #21
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****Or maybe it's "can raid enemy cabals solo" in which case Good conjie/Paladin is the shizzle,*****
I think that should read "conjie/paladin with the right virtues"
A virtueless paladin isn't really all that strong. And some virtues have nearly zero effect on solo combat.
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Isildur | Wed 02-May-07 03:29 PM |
Member since 04th Mar 2003
5969 posts
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#17664, "RE: I'd like to edit this just a bit..."
In response to Reply #25
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>A virtueless paladin isn't really all that strong. And some >virtues have nearly zero effect on solo combat.
I admit that virtuless paladins aren't all that. That said, a virtueless hero shield paladin is still well-equipped to solo raid. Inners don't wield weapons, so veteran's insight isn't a big deal. You still tank extremely well, even with out essence of temperence. You won't do a ton of melee, but you can go to town with wrath.
Basically, a virtueless shield paladin still trumps a goodie shaman. Probably two-hander as well. If you're raiding Empire, then the two-hander gets a move that hits all four inners. And he doesn't have to spend mana on wrath, so he can devote 100% of it to healing. If you're raiding scion, then the lessened ability to tank melee hits isn't a big deal.
All that said, to have zero virtues as a hero paladin, you're doing something wrong. I can't imagine any paladin I'd play not getting *at least* one virtue, and I'd almost always expect to get two eventually. And most of them have at least some utility in the context of a solo raid.
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Kastellyn | Mon 30-Apr-07 02:26 PM |
Member since 04th Mar 2003
864 posts
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#17638, "RE: Good Vs Evil balance"
In response to Reply #0
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I'll be honest from start and say I have a bias toward playing good and occasionally neutral, PC's because I can't make myself be very evil. I'm just not that mean.
I really think this is the heart of the issue: pretty much everyone is going to have some sort of bias towards the characters they tend to play. I tend to lean a bit evil (probably a 60 / 40 split) and don't really play a lot of neutrals. Usually my reasons for deciding what to play are based soley on whatever role I've dreamed up around the end of the current character's life.
Some of the recent characters on the Battlefield have made me question the balance between good and evil in character strength, particularly PK's. If you look at 3 recent evils, Nuloh, Isabeaux and Kanaev, they account for nearly 700 pks between them and less than 100 deaths. Sorry I didn't add up the numbers, too lazy. When you look at the next 5 easily identifiable good characters, they account for maybe 100 pks and about 200 deaths. Is this just the recent tide or a more pervasive trend?
I think evil (in general) brings more inherent offense to the table, whereas good (again, in general) brings more inherent defense to the table. I'd also argue that there's more easily recognizable, readily obtained defensive prep or equipment options (stone skin, resist X, etc) out there than there are similar offensive prep or equipment options. If you buy the above, then it follows that it's easier to play an evil character. Less work for a skilled or knowlegeable player. That being said, there's plenty of equipment and preps out there that bring a lot of offensive punch to a defensively oriented character - they just don't get dusted off as often.
Same reason Villagers are so popular, and relatively easy to play. They get very potent inherent offensive and defensive abilities as Cabal powers.
I realize that from a role-play perspective it's much easier to justify rampant killing by evils and to a certain degree this will attract a segment of the player population simply because of this. And certainly several of the most memorable pk'ers have been evil over the years. I'm just wondering about this from a game balance perspective.
Sure, you can have your standard psychopath who attacks everything that moves, but I think those are the exception rather than the rule for skilled evil PKers. Most of the high-end players that do evil characters have good roles and RP that go along with their mad PK skills, which usually leaves room for evil or neutral aligned allies. So they're not killing everyone in sight.
Should evil be that much stronger than good? Is it just playing style that results in numbers like this or is it an imbalance in class skills?
I'd say mostly playing style, and a difference in class skills. I wouldn't necessarily call it an imbalance, though. I don't think anyone would really want to see a good-only clone of an AP, with the exact same skill and spell set (just renamed to make it more huggy).
I'm guessing the Immortal staff has conversations about this fairly frequently but I'm wondering if there's a predilection towards evil characters among them as well and hence a bias in the game towards making evil a bit easier to get strong PC's with.
Not frequently, but we do talk about the 'evil imbalance' on occasion, mostly with regard to the skew of evil only races though.
I think we've made a number of tweaks over the last few years to address this somewhat, especially the Evil Offensive Machine Grouped With Evil Defensive Machine (bards and healers) meat grinder.
I'll end this with saying that the Good-aligned successful PKers really, really stand out head and shoulders above the Evil-aligned ones. Scion necromancer? Yeah, you expect him to carry a kick-ass PK ratio. Fortress transmuter? Not a chance. So when we see an Enarn out there taking out the evil trash (to steal a Nepism), it really makes us sit up and take notice (well, me at least).
Just a philosophical question by the usual suspect.
Friend of Bears!
Kastellyn the Devourer of Magic, Lord of Legends
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Quixotic | Mon 30-Apr-07 04:15 PM |
Member since 09th Feb 2006
837 posts
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#17640, "When I played my first elf"
In response to Reply #13
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I desperatedly wanted to find a dagger that poisoned just as my enemies were using against me. I never found one that wasn't iron or anti-good, and to make matters more challenging the better good-only daggers had to be taken off the corpses of evil pcs.
What I have come to realize is that to get pk wins, having multiple attacks that hit for devastates is not going to win you as many pks as a well-timed annhilate--the former allows too many chances to make the decision to flee, whereas that giant sword spec or AP only has to wait for that one big hit to land.
The one thing gnomes, elves, and dark-elves had going for them was Striking could help keep their giant-sized opponents from fleeing on a whim, but I see an edge has gone in to minimize that legacy's effectiveness. That's too bad.
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Quixotic | Mon 30-Apr-07 05:47 PM |
Member since 09th Feb 2006
837 posts
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#17641, "My point (I'm ADD today, sorry)"
In response to Reply #14
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Some things aren't going to be fair.
Regarding the Striking legacy, giants are by design meant to be better warriors than the smaller races, who have other options open to them. To prevent a giant from fleeing, create a flail spec. If they have Enigma, bring a friend who can curse.
The elf example was meant to illustrate that offensive-oriented gear largely favors evils, which means good aligned characters won't land as many kills. That makes sense from a role perspective, for it is probably questionable for an elf to wish to poison people, but it did mean he could never hold onto a weapon if he fought an evil dagger spec, an imperial shaman, AP, or necromancer.
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Valkenar | Sun 29-Apr-07 10:40 PM |
Member since 04th Mar 2003
1203 posts
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#17636, "Skilled players prefer evil"
In response to Reply #0
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The people who are more PK focused and the power-gamer types prefer evil. I think this is generally true, though obviously not in every case. Highly skilled players want to be able to fight everyone in sight, and aren't as worried about the downsides (backstabbing, etc).
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Isildur | Mon 30-Apr-07 12:43 AM |
Member since 04th Mar 2003
5969 posts
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#17637, "RE: Skilled players prefer evil"
In response to Reply #10
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This may be true in general, but it's by no means absolute. Most prominent evil characters are caballed. That alone rules out a substantial number of targets. If he's Empire or Battle then there are additional restrictions. Even ignoring cabal, many players of evil characters choose to form alliances rather than "fight everyone in sight".
Couple of other reasons people play evils:
1. Duergar detect hidden. Nothing similar on the goodie side.
2. More classes are evil-only (AP, Necro, Berserker) than are good-only (Paladin). While paladins have the potential to be powerhouses, they come with lots of strings attached. Strings that occasionally necessitate otherwise avoidable deaths, and that many people don't care to hassle with.
3. Goodie RP can necessitate tedious tasks. If you're a goodie and some guy asks you to help him not starve to death, if you're going to refuse then you better have a good reason. So the player has to rationalize his refusal or go help the dude, either which is viewed as a hassle. The reverse doesn't apply to evils. You don't need to justify giving the guy food. Or, at least, it's much easier, since you can just claim a selfish hidden agenda.
4. Self-fulfilling prophecy. More newbies play goods. Vets don't want to be bothered with newbies, so they play evils, which contributes to the very reason they didn't want to play goodies in the first place.
5. E-Peen. Some players want their alter-ego to be a bad mofo. Even if they're capable of an Enarn or Lariya, the "bad mofo" image is harder to sustain when one's character is supposed to be a paragon of virtue and light. It's somewhat easier when you're stealing people's souls and stuffing them in your giant, bloody axe.
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incognito | Sat 28-Apr-07 10:39 AM |
Member since 04th Mar 2003
4495 posts
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#17610, "RE: Good Vs Evil balance"
In response to Reply #0
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A lot of those kills were evil vs evil.
Goods don't fight each other nearly as much.
So you'd expect evils, on average, to have more kills.
Also, evil has the most upside POTENTIAL. That is a long way from being "easier".
I can tell you having played a lot of characters that paladin was the easiest in terms of raw power. A powerhouse AP takes a lot of work (unless you have a healer / transmuter / bard at your beck and call).
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GinGa | Sat 28-Apr-07 08:59 AM |
Member since 04th Mar 2003
996 posts
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#17607, "It's a class based bias to defense over offense"
In response to Reply #0
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Though some of this comes down to the player as well. Evil characters are incredibly independant - while Good is incredible dependant.
This is by design AND preference. I'm happy to abuse my great evil lich powers, and do so far FAR away from that other lich who might mess it up.
Goods inherently have a strength in numbers, and are supposedly more fuctional that way (what with paladins, good healers, etc). The problem is that you then rely on other people - and they not only regularly fail but can sometimes even screw you over with incompetence worse than an evil could with intention.
They also lack any class that has serious PK focused power - like Necromancers. Paladins are awesome at exploration but pretty damn crap when it comes to sealing a kill and weakening their foes through it. Good is all defense, no teeth. That means the number of kills form gaunters, summoners, monster-bashers, etc. is inflated by picking off lambs from an already deflated flock.
That said, goodies are playable as is. You just have to be prepared to gank people like Nuloh, Kanaev and Isabeaux shamelessly. If you've got the 2 on 1 advantage then you have to use it to even the odds and get rid of those zombies/unholy weapons/huge ass offensive servitor army.
Yhorian
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incognito | Sat 28-Apr-07 10:40 AM |
Member since 04th Mar 2003
4495 posts
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#17611, "He's not a 'tard"
In response to Reply #3
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He's saying that goodies should be prepared to gank the likes of Nuloh and co., not that Nuloh and co are gankers.
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Karel | Sat 28-Apr-07 12:15 PM |
Member since 04th Mar 2003
569 posts
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#17614, "RE: Guess I'm the tard"
In response to Reply #6
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Yes, yes you are. "Knowledge speaks, but wisdom listens." - Jimi Hendrix
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Sam | Sun 29-Apr-07 02:30 AM |
Member since 29th Apr 2007
8 posts
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#17619, "It's somewhat simpler than that"
In response to Reply #1
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You need look no further than spaceballs for the reason why evil characters do better in PK than goods.
"So, Lonestar...now you see that evil will triumph because good is dumb."
Your points have some merit to them, but the fact of the matter is, there are warriors, shamans, bards, thieves, assassins that rack up mega kills as evils, and you see a lot less of them doing it as goods. The RP angles that lead to goods PK'ing less often do NOT force them to have poor ratios, only lower kill counts.
It's more that the restriction on RP and PK that goods are levelled with often turns off some of the better players who enjoy having freedom in their gameplay. The dependent, needy, unskilled players often gravitate towards goodies because of the fact that they're welcomed along. This is not to say that all goods will suck and all evils rule, but for the most part, the better/more aggressive pk'ers will roll evils more often than goods.
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