Characters lord of the rings lego

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He meant Anduril, the sword reforged from the shards of Narsil. Here is the updated and, hopefully, final list.

Aragorn
Aragorn (Anduril)
Aragorn (Royal Armor)
Gimli
Gimli (Balin's Axe)
Legolas
Legolas (Galadhrim Bow)
Gandalf the Grey
Gandalf the White
Frodo
Frodo (Shire)
Frodo (Adventurer)
Frodo (Phial of Galadriel)
Frodo (Orc Disguise)
Frodo (Journey's End)
Sam (Elven Rope)
Sam
Sam (Shire)
Sam (Hero)
Sam (Orc Disguise)
Sam (Journey's End)
Merry
Merry (Shire)
Merry (Rohan Squire)
Pippin (Guard of the Citadel)
Pippin
Pippin (Shire)
Boromir
Boromir (Captain Armor)
Faramir
Gollum
Sméagol
Bilbo
Bilbo (Adventurer)
Elrond (3rd Age)
Elrond (2nd Age)
Arwen
Celeborn
Lothlorien Elf
Glorfindel
Gil-Galad
Elendil
Isildur
Isildur (Ring-bearer)
Fatty Bolger
Rosie Cotton
Gloin
Galadriel
Theoden (King)
Eomer
Eowyn
Eowyn (Dernhelm)
Halbarad
Hama
Gamling
Rohirrim Soldier
Gondorian Soldier
Gondorian Ranger
Denethor
Beregond
Prince Imrahil
Madril
Sauron
Mouth of Sauron
Saruman the White
Gothmog
Witch-king of Angmar
Nazgul (Ringwraith)
Twilight Nazgul
Mordor Orc
Moria Orc
Lurtz
Ugluk
Shagrat
Uruk-hai
Uruk-hai (Scout)
Uruk-hai (Captain)
Uruk-hai (Crossbowman)
Uruk-hai (Berserker)
Gorbag
Grishnakh
Grima Wormtongue
Mumakil Chief
Easterling
Wildman of Dunland
Haradrim
Corsair of Umbar
King of the Dead
Soldier of the Dead
Last Alliance Soldier
Last Alliance Elf Soldier
Radagast the Brown
Tom Bombadil

I believe that is 93 individual minifigures.

(Sorry to post twice but. )

Hold on! Where is Haldir. I haven't unlocked him or some of these other characters but you would think he would be there as he has a cutscene appearance! Maybe they thought kids wouldn't notice the difference between Haldir and the other soldiers or possibly Celeborn?

I also just realized that Haldir is not included.

Newborn Lurtz
Sauron (2nd Age)
Théodred
Mini-Balrog
Farmer Maggot
Barliman Butterbur

I also just realized that Haldir is not included.

Newborn Lurtz
Sauron (2nd Age)
Théodred
Mini-Balrog
Farmer Maggot
Barliman Butterbur

Where did you find that list? Where/how do you get the Pre-order DLC?

Also, I decided to use the custom character builder to create the characters that I feel are most deserving of a spot in the game that didn't make the cut. I made Goldberry using mostly Galadriel parts and Tom Bombadil's moveset. A made Haldir based on his minifigure from the Helm's Deep set and realized that he is the same as the Lothlorien elf except the helmet. I used Legolas's hair and whatever face I thought matched the best. Who should my third be, that would actually be worth using?

I'm really bad about posting twice, so sorry.

But! I just unlocked all the characters. The last list is right except for Celeborn. Celeborn is not in the DS game. Haldir is the character that should go in that spot. He was there after all! I supposed EBWonder simply confused Haldir with Celeborn without looking at the name, or he/she is not playing the DS version and there is actaully a difference between the DS version and whatever version he/she is playing.

Here is definitive list for the DS unless there are some ultra secret characters.

Aragorn
Aragorn (Anduril)
Aragorn (Royal Armor)
Gimli
Gimli (Balin's Axe)
Legolas
Legolas (Galadhrim Bow)
Gandalf the Grey
Gandalf the White
Frodo
Frodo (Shire)
Frodo (Adventurer)
Frodo (Phial of Galadriel)
Frodo (Orc Disguise)
Frodo (Journey's End)
Sam (Elven Rope)
Sam
Sam (Shire)
Sam (Hero)
Sam (Orc Disguise)
Sam (Journey's End)
Merry
Merry (Shire)
Merry (Rohan Squire)
Pippin (Guard of the Citadel)
Pippin
Pippin (Shire)
Boromir
Boromir (Captain Armor)
Faramir
Gollum
Sméagol
Bilbo
Bilbo (Adventurer)
Elrond (3rd Age)
Elrond (2nd Age)
Arwen
Haldir
Lothlorien Elf
Glorfindel
Gil-Galad
Elendil
Isildur
Isildur (Ring-bearer)
Fatty Bolger
Rosie Cotton
Gloin
Galadriel
Theoden (King)
Eomer
Eowyn
Eowyn (Dernhelm)
Halbarad
Hama
Gamling
Rohirrim Soldier
Gondorian Soldier
Gondorian Ranger
Denethor
Beregond
Prince Imrahil
Madril
Sauron
Mouth of Sauron
Saruman the White
Gothmog
Witch-king of Angmar
Nazgul (Ringwraith)
Twilight Nazgul
Mordor Orc
Moria Orc
Lurtz
Ugluk
Shagrat
Uruk-hai
Uruk-hai Scout
Uruk-hai Captain
Uruk-hai Crossbowman
Uruk-hai Berserker
Gorbag
Grishnakh
Grima Wormtongue
Mumakil Chief
Easterling
Wildman of Dunland
Haradrim
Corsair of Umbar
King of the Dead
Soldier of the Dead
Last Alliance Soldier
Last Alliance Elf Soldier
Radagast the Brown
Tom Bombadil

Warner Bros. Consumer Products and The LEGO Group announced a partnership that awards the world's leading construction toy brand exclusive rights to develop build-and-play construction sets based on THE LORD OF THE RINGS™ trilogy and the three films based on THE HOBBIT™. The multi-year licensing agreement grants access to the library of characters, settings, and stories for THE LORD OF THE RINGS property, as well as films The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, and The Hobbit: There and Back Again.

LEGO® THE LORD OF THE RINGS construction sets launched beginning in June 2012 in the United States, with LEGO THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY launched later in the year.

"Only LEGO, with their expertise in the construction category, is capable of doing justice to the incredibly imaginative environments depicted in the world of THE LORD OF THE RINGS and the two films based on THE HOBBIT," said Karen McTier, executive vice president, domestic licensing and worldwide marketing, Warner Bros. Consumer Products. "These films give life to amazing worlds and characters and we are thrilled to bring fans these products that deliver an imaginative play experience befitting of these beloved properties."

The LEGO THE LORD OF THE RINGS collection will translate into LEGO form the epic locations, scenes and characters of Middle-earth as depicted in all three films, including The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.

In late 2012, LEGO THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY gave fans of all ages a chance to build and play out the fantastical story and new characters of the legendary Middle-earth adventures depicted in The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey from Academy Award®-winning filmmaker Peter Jackson, which premiered December 14, 2012.

"Our collaboration with Warner Bros. Consumer Products has delivered numerous worldwide successes in the construction toy aisle with lines like LEGO HARRY POTTER and LEGO BATMAN, introducing us to loyal audiences who love great stories, strong characters and the toys that they inspire,” said Jill Wilfert, vice president, licensing and entertainment for The LEGO Group. "It’s particularly exciting to now be able to create sets based on the fantasy worlds and characters from THE LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy and the two films based on THE HOBBIT, not only because we know they will foster collectability and creative play, but also because these are two properties that our fans have been asking us to create for years."


LEGO Lord of the Rings: The Video Game by Traveller's Tales was released on October 30, 2012 for handheld consoles and November 13, 2012 for other platforms.

It was released on Microsoft Windows, Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Wii, PlayStation Vita, Nintendo DS, Nintendo 3DS, Mac OS X, iPhone, and iPad. The Mac OS X version was published by Feral Interactive and was released on February 21, 2013. [1] It was released November 7, 2013 for iOS.

The game takes players through the events of all three movies and is the second LEGO video game to feature fully voiced cutscenes. Though it follows the events of Peter Jackson's film trilogy, many comical twists are added in. It has the largest game environment so far of any LEGO video game, letting players explore an open world map of Middle-earth (though locations are greatly decreased in size). It also has dozens of new features not seen in past LEGO video games. Players can complete side quests, create items to use from mithril, access a large variety of collectible items from the "treasure trove", and there is a variety of characters with unique items possessing special abilities.

Contents

Levels

The Fellowship of the Ring

  • Prologue - A playable version of the fall of Sauron at the end of the second age and the finding of the One Ring
  • The Black Rider - Frodo, Sam, Merry and Pippin evade a Nazgûl while Gandalf must defeat Saruman inside Orthanc.
  • Weathertop - The four Hobbits face the Nazgûl on Weathertop, assissted by Aragorn
  • The Mines of Moria - the Fellowship is attacked by Orcs and a Balrog in Moria
  • Amon Hen - Boromir attempts to take the One Ring from Frodo and the Fellowship is broken

The Two Towers

  • Taming Gollum: Frodo and Sam are attacked by Gollum but then Gollum helps them get to Mordor while Gandalf fights the balrog on top of a tower.
  • The Dead Marshes: Frodo, Sam and Gollum are attacked at the swamp by a Nazgûl and then Faramir and his men take the hobbits to Osgiliath.
  • Track Hobbits: Aragorn, Gimli, and Legolas look for the hobbits, meet Gandalf, while Merry and Pippin go with the Ents.
  • Warg Attack: Aragorn, Gimli, Legolas and Gandalf cure Théoden and then are attacked by Wargs on the way to Helm's Deep.
  • Helm's Deep: The Battle of Helm's Deep.
  • Osgiliath: Frodo, Sam, Gollum, and Faramir fight for Osgiliath while Merry and Pippin battle alongside the Ents at Isengard.

The Return of the King

  • The Secret Stairs: Frodo, Sam, and Gollum go to the Secret Stairs, Frodo sends Sam home, Gollum betrays Frodo.
  • Cirith Ungol: Sam fights Shelob (with Shagrat's assistance), infiltrates Cirith Ungol, and escapes with Frodo.
  • The Paths of the Dead: Aragorn, Gimli, and Legolas fight The King of the Dead.
  • The Battle of Pelennor Fields: Gandalf and the West fight evil.
  • The Black Gate: The Host of the West march on The Black Gate.
  • Mount Doom: Frodo and Sam have a final showdown with Gollum. In the end, Gollum falls into the Cracks of Doom and dies, and the One Ring is destroyed, killing Sauron and saving Middle-earth.

Characters

Characters.jpg

Consoles and Windows versions

Story characters

Unlockable characters

    (Second Age) (Normal) (Normal) (Twilight) (Third Age) Orc (Normal) Ranger (Cursed) (Normal) Elf Soldier Orc Soldier (Captain) (Old)

DLC characters

Non-playable characters

    (Green Dress) (Yellow Dress) (Rivendell Clothes) (Young) (Ghost)
  • Captain of the Dead Elf
  • Mumakil Rider
  • Guritz
  • Elven soldier (second age)
  • Witch King (Twilight)
  • Witch King (Hood)
  • Bald Mordor Orc
  • Armored Uruk Hai
  • Sauron (giant)
  • Cave Troll
  • Olog Hai
  • Peter Jackson

Abilities characters may possess

"You have to toss me. Don't tell the elf!"

-Aragorn and Gimli, at the gate of Helms Deep trying to get to the bridge

Small characters (like dwarves and hobbits) can be picked up by tall characters and be thrown to reach places they can't reach. Gimli can be thrown at high up cracked LEGO to smash them.

This list shows the known playable characters in Lego The Lord of the Rings, and in some cases their Lego The Lord of the Rings costumes. All in alphabetical order.

  1. Aragorn
  2. Aragorn (King)
  3. Army of the Dead
  4. Arwen
  5. Balrog
  6. Mini-Balrog — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 2 DLC.
  7. Barliman Butterbur — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 2 DLC.
  8. Beregond — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 1 DLC.
  9. Berserker
  10. Bilbo Baggins
  11. Boromir
  12. Boromir (Captain)
  13. Cave Troll
  14. Mountain Troll
  15. Celeborn
  16. Corsair Pirate — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 2 DLC.
  17. Denethor
  18. Easterling
  19. Elendil
  20. Elrond
  21. Elrond (Second Age)
  22. Elven Soldier
  23. Eomer
  24. Eowyn
  25. Farmer Maggot — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 2 DLC.
  26. Frodo Baggins
  27. Frodo Baggins (Shire)
  28. Galadriel
  29. Gamling
  30. Gandalf the Grey
  31. Gandalf the White
  32. Gimli
  33. Gloin
  34. Glorfindel — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 2 DLC.
  35. Gollum
  36. Gondor Ranger
  37. Gondorian Soldier
  38. Grima Wormtongue
  39. Haldir
  40. Hama
  41. Isildur
  42. King Of The Dead
  43. King Theoden
  44. King Theoden (Cursed)
  45. Legolas
  46. Lothlorien Elf
  47. Madril
  48. Meriadoc “Merry” Brandybuck
  49. Mordor Orc
  50. Moria Orc
  51. Mouth Of Sauron
  52. Nazgul
  53. Nazgul (Twilight)
  54. Peregrin “Pippin” Took
  55. Peregrin “Pippin” Took (Citadel Guard)
  56. Prince Imrahil — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 1 DLC.
  57. Radagast The Brown
  58. Ringwraith
  59. Ringwraith (Twilight)
  60. Ringwraith (White)
  61. Rosie
  62. Samwise Gamgee
  63. Saruman the White
  64. Sauron (Second Age) — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 1 DLC.
  65. Shagrat
  66. Shelob
  67. Smeagol — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 1 DLC.
  68. Theodred — Also in Middle-earth Characters Pack 1 DLC.
  69. Tom Bombadil — Book Character.
  70. Treebeard
  71. Uruk-hai AKA Lurtz
  72. Uruk-hai AKA Lurtz (Newborn)
  73. Witch-King of Angmar

Please leave a comment if you see missing Lego The Lord of the Rings characters. Thanks for visiting!

This relatively long guide will detail the abilities of each member of the Fellowship. Note that this guide will not have pictures to go along with each character. This guide will not cover variants (i.e. Frodo (Shire), Frodo and Sam (Orc Disguise), etc.)


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Welcome to my first guide, a relatively long list of the nine (not including variants) members of the Fellowship of the Ring. This will list all Fellowship members (again, not including variants), as well as their innate (racial) abilities and the abilities their tools give them. Note that this guide generally assumes you are past Moria (Pippin), Amon Hen (Frodo, Sam, Legolas), the Paths of the Dead (Aragorn), and before Cirith Ungol (Frodo), finished with the game, or in Freeplay mode. This also includes a final overview and opinions of each character.

Ah, Frodo. You start off the (non-prologue) game with him, and you play as him in the last level. Regardless, this is a guide about his abilities, and they are rather useful. Outside of his sword Sting, which glows when Orcs/Uruks/Goblins are near, he also is able to go into small hatches, and has an Elven Cloak, which acts as camouflage, and the Phial of Galadriel, making him the second earliest source of light. Unfortunately, he also carries the One Ring, meaning if he approaches an alert Ringwraith, you'll have to tap whichever button you have bound to Special in order to progress. He also has a Mithril coat, meaning he can take double the hits.

The Elven Cloak is not excessively useful. It basically makes you invisible to enemies. However, it does have its uses, even though they are so situational. In the Dead Marshes, you have to use it in order to hide from the passing Ringwraith, as Sam's Elven Cloak was apparently left in the Lothlorien dry cleaners. The second use (that I know of) is in Cirith Ungol. When you come back to it in Freeplay mode, you can access a basement. This basement has Orcs manning spotlights near gates, and if they see you, the gates close and several Orcs come in an attempt to smash you into bits. However, if you have the Elven Cloak on, you can pass by without incident.
Replacements: Mithril Camouflage Tome.

The Phial is significantly more useful, being used quite a few times on Frodo's journey. It allows you to access dark areas, because for some reason all playable characters in Lego Lord of the Rings have crippling fear of the dark. Regardless, its use is required in many levels of story mode, from Taming Gollum to Mount Doom. In Freeplay, though, its use is slightly redundant as any wizard's staff, possibly some treasure items, and the Mithril Disco Phial all produce light, and the Mithril Disco Phial is infinitely more amusing.

Replacements: Wizard staves, possibly some treasure items, the epic Mithril Disco Phial.

Until you get a treasure that produces light and a Mithril Camouflage Tome, Frodo is irreplaceable. Even after you do, he still remains useful simply because of the convenience of having both a light source and a way to remain hidden in the inventory simultaneously without having to go through the treasure list. I still find him likeable, if only because of convenience.
Rating: 7.5/10

Sam is the other (non-prologue) character you start with, as well as the other character you end the game with. He has the innate Hobbit ability to go through small hatches, as well as a frying pan, spade, Elven Rope, and a Tinderbox. He is actually one of the more useful characters, as his frying pan is unique unless you can access Rosie Cotton, and the Tinderbox recipe is only obtainable on the second to last level.

Sam's trusty Frying Pan is his answer to a sword, and with an added bonus: he can use it to cook. Now, cooking isn't THAT prevalent, but is required in some levels, such as Weathertop, and sometimes can be used to access bonuses.
Replacements: Rosie Cotton's Frying Pan.

The Spade is Lego Lord of the Ring's answer to the shovels of previous games. It also allows Sam to grow plants, in order to either progress or gain riches. You can use it on either small patches of dirt studs with dust swirling around them (digging), or small patches of dirt studs with part of a fish sticking out (planting).
Replacements:Tom Bombadil, Mithril Trowel.

The Elven Rope can be used either as a rope to climb, or as a way to pull certain items. You can use it when you are close enough to an orange hook (not an orange handle: those are pullable by strong characters).
Replacements: Mithril Rope, Toy Snake.

The Tinderbox allows you to set stuff on fire. It can be used when you see a brown pad near plants/wood.
Replacements: Mithril Tinderbox, Mithril Fireworks, Magma Rock

Sam normally wouldn't be that useful, as you are required to get a replacement to the spade, the Elven Rope you can easily find a replacement for, and the Frying Pan just isn't that useful, but as the Tinderbox isn't easily replaced, he still remains useful, albeit rather grudgingly. I still like him, though, just for the novelty of beating people into a pulp with a Frying Pan.
Rating: 6/10

Considering how these two are so close together, and how their abilities are rather minor, I felt it would be nice to put these two in their own section. Merry and Pippin are both hobbits, so they can both access small hatches, and they each have their own ability.

Fishing is Merry's unique ability. This allows him to.. well. fish. This may seem minor, but it is required at least once, and can net you extra studs if you're patient.
Replacements: Gollum, Fishing Rod (treasure), Mithril Fishing Rod.

Pippin can place the bucket on his head to increase his resilience, making him more than three times better at invading lawns! In all seriousness, he is able to fill it with water to put out fire.
Replacements: Wooden Bucket, Mithril Bottomless Bucket

Sadly, Merry and Pippin sorta suck, because you're required to get treasures that make them obsolete. On the plus side, at least you don't get their replacements THAT early.
Rating: 1.5/10

Gandalf the Grey/White is the first wizard you can access. He can use his staff to move magical Lego objects, as well as illuminate dark areas. Glamdring may or may not glow when orcs are near.

Gandalf's staff is quite versatile. Its (relatively) unique use is that it can cast Wingardium Leviosa move magical (purple) Lego objects. More mundane uses include illumination, setting Ringwraiths alight, building objects with magic, and bludgeoning.

Replacements: Other Staves (All), Phials/other light sources (illumination), torches (lighting Ringwraiths), almost anything else in the game that you can hold (bludgeoning).

Gandalf can illuminate dark areas, as well as use magic for moving magical blocks. Considering he's the first wizard you get, as well as the least expensive(free), he's VERY useful.
Rating: 9/10

Aragorn (or the man of an absurd amount of names) seems, at first glance, to be one of the more bland members of the Fellowship, but is unique in two primary ways: first, he is the only one who can follow tracks via dropped items, and is one of few who is able to break Morgul Bricks with Anduril, Flame of the West.

Tracking is an ability COMPLETELY unique to Aragorn, something rare for this game. There are neither any characters nor any items that can replicate this. It basically is a little minigame where you follow a green trail of footprints in order to find a person, treasure, or another item where you can do the exact same thing (Yay?).

After the opening cutscene of Paths of the Dead, Aragorn will have Anduril in place of his old sword. Anduril is unique in that it can break Morgul Bricks, which you WILL have to do in every story mode mission after you get it.
Replacements: Narsil (Elendil), Broken Narsil (Isildur), Sauron's Mace (guess who).

Aragorn is irreplaceable, no matter what. Even though Isildur, Elendil, and Sauron all are able to break Morgul bricks as well, only he can track characters/items. The tracking, to be honest, sucks, but Anduril makes this marginally more bearable.
Rating: 5/10

Legolas is technically the third elf you can access in the game, but he is the second actually added to your character roster. He is also the first character with a bow added to your roster. His innate abilities as an elf are that he can jump higher than other characters, can swing from poles/arrows on arrow slots, can stand on deep snow, and can actually stand on tightropes instead of hanging on them like a derp.

As I just mentioned, his abilities are higher jumping capabilities (leaf markings show where you have to use this), swinging from poles/arrows on arrow slots, standing on deep snow, and standing on tightropes.
Replacements: Mithril Spring Boots(higher jumping), Mithril Gloves(swinging), Surefooted Greaves(standing on deep snow/tightropes), any elf(all of the above).

The Bow of the Galadhrim is, as far as I know, identical to a normal bow. This means it can put arrows in empty arrow slots, hit targets, and, everybody's favorite, make orcs into porcupines.
Replacements: Literally any other bow or character with a bow.

As your second elf added to your roster and your first character with a bow, Legolas is irreplaceable, at least until you get another elf that has a bow. He's still free and easy to get, though, which puts him high in my regard.
Rating: 8.75/10

Gimli is your first dwarf that you access, and is the first to use an axe. Gimli is able to access hatches in the same way as hobbits, and is able to use his axe to destroy cracked Lego bricks.

Gimli's axe, as mentioned, can destroy cracked Lego bricks. He either swings his axe around to destroy cracked bricks on walls, or jumps into the air and slams down to destroy them on the floor. At times, a taller character has to toss him at cracked Lego bricks that are out of his reach.
Replacements: Gloin/Blacksmith (all), treasure axes (destroying cracked bricks on walls or on the floor).

As you can't access another dwarf until you finish the game, Gimli is irreplaceable for most of the game. This, obviously, puts him high on the rating scale.
Rating: 8.75/10

Boromir is, frankly, the most bland out of any member of the Fellowship. He has literally no abilities that you need to use in order to progress through the game. For the sake of completeness, however, I'll list the two of his semi-unique abilities.

Boromir apparently passed through a diner in Rivendell, and decided to pocket one of the larger plates to use as a shield. In all seriousness, however, the shield basically blocks attacks. That's seriously it. Sad, but completely true.
Replacements: Look, there are tons of characters with shields. I'm not even going to bother to try to list them all. I would almost definitely miss one. As for treasure items, I'm not entirely sure some of the ones labelled as "Shield" even work. I know the Mithril Shield works as a shield, though.

The Horn of Gondor makes all nearby characters hold their ears in pain. That would be useful, if it wasn't for the fact any allies are also deafened. It could be useful if a character with a ranged attack was out of range, I suppose. No true replacements, though the Mithril Music Horn and the Mithril Disco Phial have a similar but far more amusing effect.

As I stated at the beginning of this section, Boromir is the least useful and the least interesting (ability-wise) out of all of the Fellowship, which really is a shame considering his character.
I'll give him a two for effort, at least.
Rating: 2/10

This is the end of my guide for the Fellowship members. Sorry for this possibly being a bit bland at times, but I might come back and refurbish it. Anyways, feel free to leave your feedback, though I might delete it if it is excessively negative.

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