Difference between revisions of "Mega Man: The Wily Wars"
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* At several points, the game suffers from very bad slowdown. However, for less-skilled gamers, this can be a positive effect; because the Yellow Devil's stages in Mega Man and 3 suffer from it the most, as does the battle with the Wily Machine in Mega Man. This makes those boss battles much easier. | * At several points, the game suffers from very bad slowdown. However, for less-skilled gamers, this can be a positive effect; because the Yellow Devil's stages in Mega Man and 3 suffer from it the most, as does the battle with the Wily Machine in Mega Man. This makes those boss battles much easier. | ||
:*However, running the game on a system (or emulator) with an overclocked M68000 chip will run the game at full speed regardless of how much is going on at any given time. This would normally make a Mega Drive game very unstable, but has no negative effects on ''The Wily Wars'' due to how it was programmed. | :*However, running the game on a system (or emulator) with an overclocked M68000 chip will run the game at full speed regardless of how much is going on at any given time. This would normally make a Mega Drive game very unstable, but has no negative effects on ''The Wily Wars'' due to how it was programmed. | ||
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===''Mega Man''=== | ===''Mega Man''=== |
Revision as of 15:45, 22 February 2020
Mega Man: The Wily Wars | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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System(s): Sega Mega Drive | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Publisher: Capcom | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Developer: Capcom (Minakuchi Engineering?) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Original system(s): Famicom | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sound driver: SMPS Z80 (banked) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Genre: Action | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of players: 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Mega Man: The Wily Wars, known as Rockman Mega World (ロックマンメガワールド) in Japan, is a compilation released in 1994 by Capcom for the Sega Mega Drive.
It contains updated versions of the first three Mega Man (Rockman) games, Mega Man, Mega Man II and Mega Man III, originally released for the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1987, 1988 and 1990, respectively. Also included is a set of Mega Drive-exclusive bonus stages, collectively called "Wily Tower," unlocked after finishing all three games.
In the United States, it was released as a Sega Channel exclusive, although the box art of a proposed cartridge release has since been found. Said box curiously features an unusual (for the Mega Man series) MA-13 rating, although its likely this was an error as the Sega Channel release was rated GA instead. Reportedly the game was put on indefinite hold in the US due to "graphical issues"[3], but it was officially released in the country with the release of the Mega Drive Mini in September 2019.
Contents
Gameplay
In these games the objective is to pick a stage and navigate it, defeating enemies along the way with the Mega Buster, and beat the Robot Master at the end of the stage. Once the player defeats the Robot Master, they will gain his weapon to use on a different Robot Master that has a weakness against it. In layman's terms, it's like a game of rock-paper-scissors. Once the player has defeated all the Robot Masters, they will go to the Dr. Wily stages where the final set of levels awaits. Occasionally the player will get extra power ups to assist them in their game play such as the Magnet Beam, Dr. Light Items, and Rush. opens the menu to choose a weapon, fires the weapon, and jumps. In Mega Man 3 and the Wily Tower (see below), + slides. Some weapons, such as Mega Man 2's Metal Blade, can be shot in a particular direction by holding the D-pad while pressing .
After beating the three main games the player unlocks the short bonus game Wily Tower. Wily Tower only has three Robot Masters, which the player does not gain a weapon from, and then four Wily stages. At the beginning of each Robot Master and each stage in the Wily Tower itself, the player chooses any combination of weapons and items to take with them from the three original games, giving the player an interesting twist on having weapons from different games.
The Robot Masters in Wily Tower actually share a similar origin to things in the Chinese epic Journey to the West. Buster Rod.G is based off Sun Wukong (called Son Goku in Japanese), Hyper Storm.H is based off Zhu Bajie (called Cho Hakkai in Japanese), and Mega Water.S is based off Sha Wujing (called Sa Gojou in Japanese).
Some experienced players of the original NES games may notice that the game speed is slightly slower thus making the game in some cases easier, but other parts may become more difficult due to different timings.
Levels
In each game, the player is able to choose from any of the listed Robot Masters to start from. This is just a general list of the levels.
No weapons are gained from the Wily Stages.
Mega Man 1
Cut Man | |
---|---|
The Robot Master of this stage, Cut Man, is weak against the Super Arm. The Rolling Cutter (C) is obtained after beating him. | |
Guts Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Guts Man, is weak against the Hyper Bomb. The Super Arm (G) is obtained after beating him. | |
Ice Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Ice Man, is weak against the Thunder Beam. The Ice Slasher (I) is obtained after beating him. | |
Bomb Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Bomb Man, is weak against the Fire Storm. The Hyper Bomb (B) is obtained after beating him. | |
Fire Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Fire Man, is weak against the Ice Slasher. The Fire Storm (F) is obtained after beating him. | |
Elec Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Elec Man, is weak against the Rolling Cutter. The Thunder Beam (E) is obtained after beating him. The Magnet Beam (M) is found in this stage as well which is necessary for later levels, and requires the Super Arm in order to get it. | |
Wily Stage 1 | |
At the end of the level the player fights the Yellow Devil which involves memorizing a pattern to defeat. Its weakness is the Thunder Beam. | |
Wily Stage 2 | |
The player will once again fight Cut Man and Elec Man in this stage. Copy Robot clones Mega Man and uses the weapon the player is using to make things difficult. The Fire Storm, Hyper Bomb and Thunder Beam are effective against it. | |
Wily Stage 3 | |
A straightforward stage that leads the player to CWU-01P, which is weak against the Super Arm. This boss' pattern just increases in speed after each part is destroyed. | |
Wily Stage 4 | |
The player will fight the other four Robot Masters in this stage one after another and then will fight Dr. Wily in a 2-form final battle. The Wily Machine 1 is weak against the Fire Storm in its first phase, and weak against the Thunder Beam and Rolling Cutter in its second phase. |
Mega Man 2
Bubble Man | |
---|---|
The Robot Master of this stage, Bubble Man, is weak against the Metal Blade. The Bubble Lead (B) is obtained after beating him. | |
Air Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Air Man, is weak against the Leaf Shield. The Air Shooter (A) is obtained after beating him. The player also obtains Item-2 (2) which also allows them to ride a horizontal flying platform. | |
Quick Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Quick Man, is weak against the Crash Bomber and Time Stopper. The Quick Boomerang (Q) is obtained after beating him. | |
Heat Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Heat Man, is weak against the Bubble Lead. The Atomic Fire (F) is obtained after beating him. The player also obtains Item-1 (1) which allows them to make rising platforms. | |
Wood Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Wood Man, is weak against the Atomic Fire and Metal Blade. The Leaf Shield (W) is obtained after beating him. | |
Metal Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Metal Man, is weak against the Quick Boomerang and, ironically, his own weapon. The Metal Blade (M) is obtained after beating him. | |
Flash Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Flash Man, is weak against the Metal Blade. The Time Stopper (F) is obtained after beating him. The player also obtains Item-3 (3) which creates a bouncing platform that climbs walls. | |
Crash Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Crash Man, is weak against the Air Shooter. The Crash Bomber (C) is obtained after beating him. | |
Wily Stage 1 | |
This stage ends with an auto-scrolling section where Mecha Dragon appears and chases the player to three platforms from which they fight from. Its weakness is the Quick Boomerang. | |
Wily Stage 2 | |
The boss, Picopico-kun, is made up of little enemies that appear out of the wall, attacking the player. Defeat all the enemies to win. Their weakness is the Bubble Lead. | |
Wily Stage 3 | |
At the end, the player must fight the massive Guts Tank to win this stage. Its weakness is the Quick Boomerang. | |
Wily Stage 4 | |
There are several Buebeam Traps in the boss room and they all need to be destroyed with the Crash Bomber. The player has to be conservative about their weapon energy to win this. | |
Wily Stage 5 | |
The player fights all eight Robot Masters and then goes through a ninth portal to fight the Wily Machine 2. The first form is weak against the Atomic Fire, and the second form is weak against the Crash Bomber. | |
Wily Stage 6 | |
Wily reveals himself to be an Alien and fights the player. Only the Bubble Lead can damage him; all other weapons will heal him. |
Mega Man 3
Spark Man | |
---|---|
The Robot Master of this stage, Spark Man, is weak against the Shadow Blade. The Spark Shock (SP) is obtained after defeating him. | |
Snake Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Snake Man, is weak against the Needle Cannon. The Search Snake (SN) is obtained after defeating him. | |
Needle Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Needle Man, is weak against the Gemini Laser. The Needle Cannon (NE) is obtained after defeating him. The player also obtains Rush Jet (RJ) which allows them to call Rush to turn into a platform that can fly in all directions. | |
Hard Man | |
Part way through the stage the player will encounter a fight with Proto Man. The Robot Master of this stage, Hard Man, is weak against the Magnet Missile. The Hard Knuckle (HA) is obtained after defeating him. | |
Top Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Top Man, is weak against the Hard Knuckle. The Top Spin (TO) is obtained after defeating him. | |
Gemini Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Gemini Man, is weak against the Search Snake. The Gemini Laser (GE) is obtained after defeating him. | |
Magnet Man | |
Part way through the stage the player will encounter a fight with Proto Man. The Robot Master of this stage, Magnet Man, is weak against the Spark Shock. The Magnet Missile (MA) is obtained after defeating him. | |
Shadow Man | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Shadow Man, is weak against the Top Spin. The Shadow Blade (SH) is obtained after defeating him. The player also obtains Rush Marine (RM) which behaves the same as Rush Jet, but only works in water. It can jump out of water, but it won't move on land. | |
Doc Robot K-176 (Spark Man) | |
This boss then appears in Needle Man's, Gemini Man's, Shadow Man's, and Spark Man's stages taking on the powers of the Robot Masters from Mega Man 2. Defeat Doc Robot in these four stages to continue on.
The Doc Robots encountered in this stage are:
| |
Doc Robot K-176 (Needle Man) | |
This boss then appears in Needle Man's, Gemini Man's, Shadow Man's, and Spark Man's stages taking on the powers of the Robot Masters from Mega Man 2. Defeat Doc Robot in these four stages to continue on.
The Doc Robots encountered in this stage are:
| |
Doc Robot K-176 (Gemini Man) | |
This boss then appears in Needle Man's, Gemini Man's, Shadow Man's, and Spark Man's stages taking on the powers of the Robot Masters from Mega Man 2. Defeat Doc Robot in these four stages to continue on.
The Doc Robots encountered in this stage are:
| |
Doc Robot K-176 (Shadow Man) | |
This boss then appears in Needle Man's, Gemini Man's, Shadow Man's, and Spark Man's stages taking on the powers of the Robot Masters from Mega Man 2. Defeat Doc Robot in these four stages to continue on.
The Doc Robots encountered in this stage are:
| |
Break Man | |
This stage is just a battle against Break Man. | |
Wily Stage 1 | |
At the end of the level the player fights the Kamegoro Maker. The Kamegoro Maker itself is actually invincible, but if the player destroys the turtles it produces, they will win. The turtles are weak to the Shadow Blade. | |
Wily Stage 2 | |
At the end of this stage the player fights the Yellow Devil MK-II. Its weakness is the Hard Knuckle. | |
Wily Stage 3 | |
At the end of this stage the player fights the Holograph Mega Mans. Only one is real, and it's up to the player to find that one. It is weak to the Search Snake. | |
Wily Stage 4 | |
This stage is basically just like the teleporter system from Mega Man 2. After a short stage, the player arrives at a teleporter room where they must rematch every Robot Master. | |
Wily Stage 5 | |
The player fights two forms of the Wily Machine 3 here. The turret must be destroyed first, which is weak to the Hard Knuckle and Spark Shock, then the player must attack the exposed cockpit, which is weak to the Hard Knuckle. | |
Wily Stage 6 | |
The true final battle against Gamma and Dr. Wily. Gamma's first phase is weak against the Hard Knuckle, while the second phase can only be damaged by the Top Spin and Search Snake. |
Wily Tower
NOTE: No weapons are gained from any of the Wily Tower levels. The player chooses eight weapons and three items from the original three games prior to starting.
Buster Rod G | |
---|---|
The Robot Master of this stage, Buster Rod G, is weak against the Hyper Bomb, Rolling Cutter, Air Shooter, Atomic Fire, Bubble Lead and Hard Knuckle. | |
Mega Water S | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Mega Water S, is weak against the Ice Slasher, Hyper Bomb, Atomic Fire and Search Snake. | |
Hyper Storm H | |
The Robot Master of this stage, Hyper Storm H, is weak against the Hyper Bomb, Fire Storm, Atomic Fire, Crash Bomber, Metal Blade, Gemini Laser, Shadow Blade and Spark Shock. This Robot Master is unique in that he has two energy bars. | |
Wily Tower Stage 1 (Fire Snakey) | |
This stage primarily features enemies and gimmicks from Mega Man 1. At the end of the stage, the player fights the Fire Snakey, and its weakness is the Bubble Lead. | |
Wily Tower Stage 2 (Iron Ball) | |
This stage primarily features enemies and gimmicks from Mega Man 2. At the end of the stage, the player fights the Iron Ball, and its weaknesses are the Thunder Beam and Spark Shock. | |
Wily Tower Stage 3 (2nd battle w/ Buster Rod G) | |
This stage primarily features enemies and gimmicks from Mega Man 3. At the end of the stage, the player has a rematch with Buster Rod G, and this weaknesses this time are the Rolling Cutter, Leaf Shield, Hard Knuckle and Magnet Missile. | |
Wily Tower Stage 4 (Wily Machine) | |
The true final battle against Dr. Wily in a three-phase fight. The first and final phases are weak to the Thunder Beam, and the second phase is weak to the Hard Knuckle. |
History
Development
Artist Keiji Inafune claimed that the development of the game was outsourced and rather slow going. He described the debugging procedure as "an absolute nightmare", even helping out in process himself as he felt bad for the person in charge. "It was so bad," he recalled, "I found myself saying, 'I can't believe we've made it out of there alive.'" The team later questioning whether the nightmare was "truly necessary", led to changes in procedure to try and avoid similar situations in the future.
With the theme of the game being the novel Journey to the West, Inafune stated that while drawing the three new boss characters he "tried to take the flavor of the theme and give it that Mega Man twist." Other than these characters, Inafune's only other illustrative contribution to the game was the depiction of Mega Man and Rush on the cover art. The soundtrack of The Wily Wars, composed by Kinuyo Yamashita, consists of 16-bit versions of the original Mega Man musical scores, as well as new songs for the Wily Tower portion of the game.
Versions
General
- In all games, shots are limited to one shot every few frames of animation. In the originals, players could fire weaponry on every other frame.
- The controls in these versions of the games seem a little tighter than the originals, though Mega Man himself seems to have a slight delay before moving because he is able to do sidesteps.
- A number of weapons now have a noticeable "can't move" delay after firing, such as the Items from Mega Man 2 or the Shadow Blade from Mega Man 3.
- All three games now have a "save game" feature. However, the "password" feature was removed from Mega Man 2 and 3.
- At several points, the game suffers from very bad slowdown. However, for less-skilled gamers, this can be a positive effect; because the Yellow Devil's stages in Mega Man and 3 suffer from it the most, as does the battle with the Wily Machine in Mega Man. This makes those boss battles much easier.
- However, running the game on a system (or emulator) with an overclocked M68000 chip will run the game at full speed regardless of how much is going on at any given time. This would normally make a Mega Drive game very unstable, but has no negative effects on The Wily Wars due to how it was programmed.
Mega Man
- While the original Mega Man's boss select screen simply showed the Robot Masters' in-game sprites as icons, the Wily Wars remake uses new mugshots to match Mega Man 2 and 3, and for Dr. Wily, his in-game sprite for an icon is replaced by the Dr. W logo.
- Cut Man is much tougher in the remake than he was in the original game. Mostly due to the fact that his flinch is much less intense and the Mega Buster deals a third of the damage that it would normally do.
- Bomb Man is similarly more difficult. If you got near him in the original, he would normally jump away, but in Wily Wars, he instead opts to get close to you.
- Power-ups do not reappear when leaving the screen and coming back.
- The Pause/Unpause glitch has been fixed.
- Some Robot Master AIs have been slightly modified.
- Normally during invincibility frames you can still die from spikes. This is fixed in this version to be like all other Mega Man games.
- The gravity bug when falling off the Magnet Beam and the platforms in Guts Man's stage and Wily Fortress 4 has been fixed.
Mega Man 2
- Mega Man 2, similar to its original Japanese release, Rockman 2: The Mystery of Dr. Wily, does not have a difficulty selection. Instead, it only plays on "Difficult".
- Quick Man is much slower in this version, though he no longer takes two damage from Mega Buster shots as he did in the "Difficult" mode or the Japanese version of Mega Man 2.
- Flash Man also takes one damage from the Mega Buster instead of two, like he did in "Difficult Mode."
- Some Robot Master AIs are slightly modified.
- Robots and Robot Masters have invincibility frames where they can not be damaged. This is not true for robots that die in one hit.
- When the player loses all of their lives, they no longer lose all their E-tanks. In the original, continuing meant forfeiting any and all E-tanks remaining in the inventory, preventing players from farming the start of Metal Man's stage. Now it is possible to do so.
Mega Man 3
- The grey tones on Proto Man's sprites have been changed to white.
- Proto Man's "shadow" sprites from the ending are found in the game data, however, Capcom decided to just use a "shadowy" palette on the original sprites instead of those.
- While not a difference, neither Proto Man nor Break Man have been resized like Mega Man and the Robot Masters have. They don't have any additional frames of animation, either.
- On the Weapon Select Menu, Rush is now blue instead of red. (This also happens in Wily Tower.)
- The Wily Castle map screen music has been shortened from its original tune. (Incidentally, the extended theme wasn't accessible in-game anyway.)
- Like the first two games, some Robot Master AIs are modified.
- Robots and Robot Masters have invincibility frames where they can not be damaged. This is not true for robots that die in one hit.
- Magnet Missile's have odd behavior; sometimes they do not "home" (right turn up or down) correctly. Hard Man and the Doc Robot Metal Man are much more difficult due to this fact.
- The crocodile-like traps in Hard Man's stage activate quicker than the original game, so do other traps.
- Controller 2 cheats from the NES game have been removed.
- Early Rush adapter glitch removed.
Localised names
Language | Localised Name | English Translation |
---|---|---|
English | Mega Man: The Wily Wars | Mega Man: The Wily Wars |
Japanese | ロックマンメガワールド | Rockman Mega World |
Production credits
The original three games have their credits screens still in place, but after beating Wily Tower there is actually no credits listed; just a cutscene and a list of all the Robot Masters. There is also no list of credits in the manual either.
The only source of credits available comes from the worklist of freelancer Kouji Murata[4], who handled all the sound aspects (sound driving, sound porting, composition and arrangement and sound effects) for Mega Man III and IV (Rockman World 3 and 4 in Japan). He credits himself for Sound Effects in The Wily Wars and refers to a "Yamashita-san" when crediting the music.
Because he worked through Minakuchi Engineering from 1990 to 1992 (during which Mega Man III was created) and continued to work on the Rockman World series up until late 1994 as a freelancer, he is most likely referring to Kinuyo Yamashita of Castlevania fame, as she was associated with Minakuchi Engineering around that time. This is because Yamashita was contracted through the company circa 1995 to compose the music for [the SNES version of] Mega Man X3 (Rockman X3 in Japan). Additionally, the two had previously worked together on Famicon Disk System title Arumana's Miracle.
Sound Effects: Kouji Murata
BGM Arrangement & Original Music Composition & Arrangement: Kinuyo Yamashita
Magazine articles
- Main article: Mega Man: The Wily Wars/Magazine articles.
Promotional material
also published in:
- Top Consoles (FR) #4: "Julliet/Août 1995" (1995-0x-xx)[5]
Artwork
Physical scans
Sega Retro Average | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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|
70 | |
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Based on 18 reviews |
Technical information
ROM dump status
System | Hash | Size | Build Date | Source | Comments | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
✔ |
|
2MB | 1995-03 | Cartridge (EU) | ||||||||||
✔ |
|
2MB | 1994-09 | Cartridge (JP) | ||||||||||
✔ |
|
2MB | 1994-09 | Cartridge (JP) | Minor differences in code. | |||||||||
? |
|
2MB | 1994-09 | Mega Drive Mini (US) |
References
- ↑ File:EGM2_Feb_1995.png, page 32
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 File:NewReleasesCatalogueApril-May1995AU.pdf, page 9
- ↑ Game Players, "Vol. 7 No. 10 October 1994" (US; 1994-xx-xx), page 18
- ↑ http://www.100v.jp/~yagiyama/works/index.html
- ↑ Top Consoles, "Julliet/Août 1995" (FR; 1995-0x-xx), page 163
- ↑ Beep! MegaDrive, "October 1994" (JP; 1994-09-08), page 18 (20)
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Sega Saturn Magazine, "September 1995" (JP; 1995-08-08), page 87
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Mega Fun, "04/95" (DE; 1995-03-22), page 71
- ↑ Mean Machines Sega, "March 1995" (UK; 1995-01-30), page 62-65 (62)
- ↑ Top Consoles, "Julliet/Août 1995" (FR; 1995-0x-xx), page 94-97 (94)
- ↑ 1700 igr dlya Sega, "" (RU; 2001-xx-xx), page 178
- ↑ Beep! MegaDrive, "October 1994" (JP; 1994-09-08), page 20
- ↑ Consoles +, "Juillet/Août 1995" (FR; 1995-0x-xx), page 132
- ↑ Computer + Video Giochi, "Dicembre 1994" (IT; 1994-xx-xx), page 126
- ↑ Digitiser (UK) (1995-07-21)
- ↑ Famitsu, "1994-10-28" (JP; 1994-10-14), page 40
- ↑ MAN!AC, "05/95" (DE; 1995-04-12), page 44
- ↑ Mean Machines Sega, "March 1995" (UK; 1995-01-30), page 62
- ↑ Player One, "Juillet/Août 1995" (FR; 1995-0x-xx), page 106
- ↑ Play Time, "5/95" (DE; 1995-04-05), page 104
- ↑ Saturn Fan, "1995 January" (JP; 1994-12-xx), page 63
- ↑ Sega Magazin, "September 1995" (DE; 1995-08-16), page 20
- ↑ Sega Pro, "Easter 1995" (UK; 1995-03-23), page 55
- ↑ Top Consoles, "Julliet/Août 1995" (FR; 1995-0x-xx), page 94
- ↑ Tricks 16 bit, "Tricks Sega Gold 800 igr" (RU; 1998-03-20), page 113
- ↑ Video Games, "8/95" (DE; 1995-07-26), page 79
Mega Man games for Sega systems | |
---|---|
Mega Man: The Wily Wars (1994) | |
Mega Man (1995) | |
Mega Man X3 (1996) | Mega Man 8 (1997) | Mega Man X4 (1997) | Super Adventure Rockman (1998) | |
Unlicensed Mega Man games for Sega systems | |
Rockman X3 (1996) | |
Mega Man related media | |
Rockman 8: Metal Heroes Hisshou Kouryaku Hou (1997) |
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