TDM #1, arc 1.0: we drift like worried fire
BUFF
Bonded of The Sorrowweld will find that the NPCs are especially friendly to them this month. Seriously, they just keep trying to give you things. It might get annoying.
DEBUFF
For those who are bonded to Tarnished Az-Mehet, you keep seeing shadows out of the corner of your eye on every screen in the ship, even your datapad. Something is lurking.
At first, you feel a pull. In which direction, you do not know. When a portal of shimmering black and glittering stars appears in front of you, it only seems natural to step into it. On the journey, it is as if you see everything: ancient galaxies wheeling through space, cultures born and growing and leaving their planets, lights creeping over landmasses and them winking out all at once. You see the hungry arm of a black hole, an enigmatic smile under a mirrored mask, a fist clenched tight around an endless sword. Fangs shining in starlight, bandaged feet that have traveled so many miles and still remain sturdy, and code shattering under titanium will.
And then your feet touch solid ground again, and what you have seen is suddenly hard to recall, the merest of glimpses springing to mind when you try to think back.
All you know is that you witnessed something enormous, something you probably shouldn't have seen.
As you struggle to refocus your gaze, all you see for a long moment is white. White walls, white floor. Narrow white cots lined up against a wall, screens blinking above them in tones of soothing aqua and mint. You are in a medbay — a highly advanced one, given the lack of bulky machinery — but perhaps the most eye-catching thing about the room is a long window showing endless black and twinkling stars outside.
Before you can give voice to any thoughts, a small robot flutters toward you, and perches on the back of a chair. "Hello, Wayfarer!" the birdform chirps cheerfully. "I imagine you must have many questions; allow me to enlighten you! You have fallen victim to a quantum accident and have been pulled to another universe, but the Ascendants, in their generosity, intercepted your signal and brought you here so that you did not wind up in empty space. You are aboard the Theorem of the Astral Rose; our mission is to explore uncharted space and search for the Song!"
They pause, thinking, their little blue eye aglow, and then brighten.
"Oh! Introductions are in order! I am Starling's Lament in Flight, but you may call me Starling's Lament. I am one of the Hosts of this exploration vessel; we will do everything we can to ensure a safe voyage for you. Unfortunately, at this moment, we cannot send you home. The Ascendants have indicated that their search for the Song may play some key role in doing so." They whistle a merry tune. "Please enjoy your stay!"
When you manage to get your wits about you -- it's a bumpy ride between universes! -- you start to leave the medbay. Starling's Lament has indicated that you are free to explore the ship, and nowhere is off limits to you. As you leave the cool white tones of the medbay behind, a hallway stretches out in front of you. Both sides are transparent, offering a view into the long dark of space beyond. However, unlike deep space, there is currently quite a lot to see.
On the left lays the broad curve of a planet, lush green landmass and white clouds skidding across its surface. Its star is just sinking behind it, lighting up the very edge of its atmosphere in tones of engine-burn orange and ozone blue, as long shadows cast by enormous space elevators creep across the landmasses. Its most eye-catching feature, however, are the hexagonal structures webbed across its surface, connected by fine corridors with all the geometric precision of woven spider's silk. You can just barely see the tiny dots of spaceships flowing around them, docking, embarking, shuttling between them.
"That is the Redline Trading Post." You hear a tiny whisper, and look up to see another robot — a beetleform, this time, with a shiny dotted shell — watching you curiously from its place on the ceiling. In fact, there are a number of other Hosts doing the exact same thing; a snakeform coiled around a barrier rail, a catform with bright yellow eyes peeking around the corner, a chirping droneform hovering some distance down the hallway. They're all fascinated by you. "But we will be departing soon. You will not get to taste the Galactic Snowball Nova-Cream, the shining culinary jewel of Redline. Sorry. I hear it is very tasty."
You look to your right, away from the planet and the Redline post, to gaze out into the depths of space. In the distance, there is a nebula, its gasses lit up in shades of coral pink and deep purple. It is pockmarked with stars both young and old, newborn stellar entities cradled in the depths of its life-making dust. Set against the dark of space, it is a flower in bloom.
It's beautiful, except—
The longer you look at it, the more something nags at the corner of your mind. A memory glances across your thoughts, unbidden. Something you hoped for, maybe; or something you fear. Whatever the memory, as you gaze at the nebula, a small piece of it curls, shaping in response to your memory. It is your face, reflected perfectly. Smiling, or howling in anger, or weeping.
Eventually, the nebula will go back to normal. But for now, it reflects the fears and triumphs of the new Wayfarers, a mirror held up in the darkness of space.
Once you make it into the bulk of the ship, the Hosts inform you that as they have just restocked all essential supplies, they will be throwing a party in your honor, and they hope you will sample the food.
Maybe you're incredibly dubious about this. Maybe you're starving after your long journey. Either way, you find yourself in the mess hall. It's less like a traditional mess hall and more like a park full of food trucks with seating in the middle. The food trucks are bright and eye-catching, Hosts serving huge heaps of food from their interiors, as their signs advertise everything from Earthen Ancient Egyptian food (As Close As We Can Reconstruct It!) to Raxalar Black Stew (New and Improved: Now Free Of Grit!).
Real grass is underfoot, and the picnic-style seating in the middle appears to be real wood. The lighting is a myriad; whimsical string lights strung between the trucks, floating globe lights playfully dancing like fireflies, and the luminescence of a dogform's patterns and a droneform's enormous eyes and a flyform's glittering trail. The Hosts are clearly excited.
And if the food happens to have... some kind of effect?
Well, the Hosts say, that's only to be expected! The attention of an Edict may, for a nano-second, turn toward the start of this voyage, and that's bound to make anything go a little wonky. Also, they've used some ingredients from the local system, and it's only customary there to share some thoughts and ideas and memories when you eat together. How else can you properly get to know each other?
This may or may not look appealing to you depending on your sensibilities, but it does smell incredible. Soft, savory red meat paired with the fragrant, earthy scent of the vegetable. The Red Buffalo is perfectly seared, and if you poke them cautiously, you'll find the spikes are entirely edible, as long as you chew well enough. If Wayfarers eat this, they will find themselves sharing a memory with the nearest person, a vision of the last time they were truly happy.
It seems the Hosts aren't quite sure of the appropriate alcohol content of substances, as this will burn all the way down, chased by a cool, sparkly feeling all the way down one's esophagus. It tastes of sweetly sour plums, and a potential hangover tomorrow morning. Wayfarers that imbibe this alcohol beverage will start overhearing the thoughts of those around them, as if they are perfectly in tune with everyone.
Ah, a perfectly homey looking meal, sweet and savory, gently steaming. These are a must-try for any Wayfarer with a sweet tooth, proudly boasting of the agricultural and apiary skill of a nearby alien culture. The buns are perfectly fluffy, the spiced honey is warming. What's not to love? After eating this, Wayfarers will find themselves and the nearest person sharing a vision of themselves as they might have been had they gone down the worst possible path in their life.
This isn't the Cherry Cola! you may or may not be familiar with, but it's interesting that whatever alien came up with this came up with the same Earth word. Or maybe the Hosts got it from Earth? Either way, it's fizzy, it's sparkly, it makes you feel like you're floating on rainbow bubbles. Upon drinking this, imbibers will telepathically project outward a vision of the most beautiful thing they've ever seen.
Dear god. What is it? Who came up with this? Who is even brave enough to try this? It certainly… has a taste. It… has an appearance. Whether either of these things are good is in the eye of the beholder. Wayfarers adventurous enough to put this in their mouths (or other eating appendages) will find themselves uncontrollably speaking aloud of the thing they long for the most.
Eventually, it comes time to launch.
The Hosts are a blur of activity, some of them packing up more delicate equipment in case of errant gravity waves during initial propulsion, some of them herding the Wayfarers into a seating area reserved specifically for the safety of its occupants during launch, deceleration, and rare turbulence. You are informed that engine flare will be so bright it will rival a star for the next twenty-five hours of engine start-up burn, but you will only need to stay strapped in for half an hour or so.
As the Theorem's enormous engines start cycling, the entire ship seems to hum in melodic song. And after everybody is strapped in, that's when the intensity starts. Gravity seems to want to push everything toward the stern, and Wayfarers are pressed hard against their seats with the inertia. After half an hour, the Hosts cheerily announce that everybody is free to get up and move around — but you might want to stay near a window, as they will be doing a low dive through the nearby planet's second moon's atmosphere, and it will be quite the sight.
Soon enough, the moon becomes visible. It is of unbroken crimson red, though subtle shifting in its surface lets you guess that it's water rather than earth. And then, as the Theorem rolls gently to the side, the view in the windows nearly perfectly split between moon and space, that's when you see them, swimming through the atmosphere.
To call them fish would be inaccurate — they are not in an ocean, or any body of water — and yet, that will be the word that springs to mind for most Wayfarers. Some of them are sleek and small, schooling in packs of shimmering white and ochre. Others are long and pointed, appendages pointed backward to exude a bright pink gas that propels them forward and which trails after them like oil slicks in the air. The locals call them x'enuda, the Hosts tell you, a combination of words that mean to fly and cunning prey.
They swim closer, swarming outside of the window. Some of them swim through, phasing through the shielding and windows alike, to dance gently in the interior of the Theorem, darting to and fro. If any Wayfarers find themselves curious enough to reach out and touch these creatures, they will find themselves similarly phased, capable of passing through matter for the next few minutes before the shared electrical field wears off and returns them to normal corporality. The external shield will catch you if you phase right through the ship's floor, but you may need to swim back up. Others may find themselves suddenly craving company, as if the x'enuda's instinct to remain safe in a school is catching.
"All Wayfarers, please report to the docking bay!"
As you filter into the enormous cavern that makes up the docking bay of the Theorem, you see rows of smaller spacecraft. Some of them are sleek and light, like they'd be as free as a feather during aerial combat, while others are bulky and spacious. Many of them have designs in alien languages on them, or bizarre looking mascots, seemingly for good luck. As the occasional screen informs you, you are free to claim any one of the ships as your own, but first, Starling's Lament would very much like to give a presentation.
Past the rows of ships lays an expansive opening in the side of the Theorem, many stories high and wide, a shimmering forcefield the only thing between you and space. Beyond it, you can see the quickly fading shape of the planet and moons you left behind as the Theorem continues acceleration. It is in front of this that Starling's Lament has set up a large hologram of a star map.
As they start to explain once everyone is gathered, the map currently shows the region of space you are in. It is an enormous quadrant of multiple galaxies, some pinwheeled in shape, some circuler or tube-like. A line arcs across it, heading into what is clearly less-explored space, beyond the area colorfully marked as Alliance territory. Eventually, that line stops at a star, which then magnifies to reveal a six planet system, the second planet from the star circled.
This is your first objective: designation Epsilon-355.
There are many stories of which planets the Last Pilgrim has set foot upon, and yet, nobody has ever verified any of them. This, the Ascendants claim, is the closest match they have found for one of those planets in a scrap of story: a land of golden sand and shimmering glass, where pilgrimages track their way across the Golden Barrens desert. The planet is small and unassuming in the hologram, and the details next to it are scarce: relatively normal gravity, breathable atmosphere. More details will become available as the Theorem gets close enough for in-depth scans.
If there any notes of the Song to be found, they may yet be found in the Last Pilgrim's footprints.
Presentation nearly over, Starling's Lament directs you a series of tables that have neatly assembled packages of gear. Once you have picked your Division, you are welcome to claim the technological tools of its trade. You can also look at the spaceships available to claim, or even just watch out the docking bay door as you leave the planet behind and head deeper into space.
Welcome to the mission, Wayfarer.

a2 | nier automata
IMBIBE._
INITIATE._
CONTINUE?_
initiate.
[ Kinsey's tone is not particularly kind. It verges a little on the patronising side, actually, but that's only because she's not a very nice person. She's carrying her own Security bag already, her rifle slung over her shoulder. ]
How'd you figure that one? The gun?
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I'm an Attacker model. A melee specialist. [She clarifies, still peevish.] This isn't my weapon designation. If they want security, then they should give me my sword back.
[Full sentences and an explanation! A marvel of advanced technology.]
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Her expression turns ruefully amused, though, when she gets a response. ]
I'd never disagree with a woman who wants her sword back. Did they, like, confiscate it?
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initiate
Her eyes wander towards the weaponry and supplies. These guns look different from anything she's seen back home. Though, she has a feeling that she can figure out how to make it work regardless. Mikasa's natural intuition for these things has never let her down before. ]
Have you ever fired a gun before?
[When she speaks her tone sounds curt. ]
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She's quiet out of what appears to be spite for a few moments, and then her words come, albeit tersely.]
Yes. [Obviously, she thinks to herself, and then realizes that this person, like her, was likely from somewhere else. Perhaps this was a world without YoRHa. Was she the only one here?
Alone again...
It couldn't be helped. She continues after a pause.] ...Basic training. I was designed for melee combat. Swordsmanship.
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[Seems like A2 is more than capable of handling herself. Mikasa's more familiar with fighting monsters rather than people. However, she thinks that her experiences might come in handy here.
She curiously takes another look at A2. Perhaps A2 is much stronger than she appears to be. A part of Mikasa can't help but wonder what A2 meant by "designed." It could mean that she was born for combat.]
I want to see how good you are.
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imbibe.
[ he hadn't been watching her specifically, but it's hard not to interject when someone looks as confused as she does. but he keeps himself approachable, voice friendly, expression open. ]
Like Fonta, though I'm guessing you're not familiar with that either.
[ no one else has been, not that it's been much of a surprise. the people - and crew - gathered here are of all shapes and sizes and with the varying backgrounds to match. not unlike the cadre of people he oversees down at the bottom of the ocean. except here, he's back to being one of them. just another guy, without anything special to his name. ]
There's no harm in trying it if you're curious. Worst thing that happens is you learn you don't like it and avoid it in the future.
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She answers him, voice still soft and tone hesitant now, realizing what she is in the presence of.] .... No. I don't know what "Fonta" is.
[She turns her attention to her drink again. Is she curious? No one was here to tell her that she couldn't try it, after all. A strange and dismal thought: there was no one left to enforce rules on her.
A2 takes her first, tentative sip. The carbonation tickles her nose, making it wrinkle, but it is sweet. Almost overwhelmingly so to someone like her — her eyes go wide and startled, and she coughs a bit, more out of surprise than from choking on anything.
Eventually, after she's collected herself:] It tingles... [She didn't know that drinks could tingle. It's not altogether unpleasant, and she takes another cautious sip.] It's [sweet, an explosion of flavor and sensations, a new experience—] not bad.
[It was better than not bad — it was good. Incredible. She feels better than she has in a very long time, light and without burdens. It occurs to her that she'll be expected to make conversation with strangers on this vessel. What a bothersome task, without Pod to rely on, but she felt she could make do.]
You're from somewhere else too?
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but he gives her time and space to go at her own pace, casually taking a sip of his own drink while he waits. it's not until she's had her drink, wrinkled her nose, and announced her opinion that he answers. ]
Not bad indeed, though I'll always take a nice cup of tea over a bottle of Fonta. [ no one asked him but he's delivering judgment regardless. ] And yes, that's right. I'm from a place called Fontaine, in Teyvat.
[ he doesn't expect her to recognize any of those names either, but at least she'll have a reference point in the unlikely event someone else from home also finds themself sucked into a place beyond the stars. ]
It's quite different from this [ what was it again ] ship but a lovely place in its own right.
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reflect
It isn't that he has never seen a woman before. There were plenty in the colonies, but none so ghostly in appearance as this woman, her white hair like a sheet, body designed like a pristine knife compared to the hard, rough faces and hands of those factory workers he's only known back home. There is one comparison in his mind, but he's never witnessed one of the Mother in person. He's heard stories. A rumor doesn't make it real.
Anyway, as he's gawking, he hears the woman speak again. It's enough to split his attention out the window to the distant nebula.]
Uh. [Intelligent.] I guess so. Doesn't it make you feel weird, though?
[Now, his dark eyes avoid looking into those swirling pink-gold colors of stars too long — because of what happened before. That sick, empty feeling in his stomach still hasn't waned much.]
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"No. 2! Are you paying attenti—"
A2 pulls away from the window in surprise, bringing her hand close to her chest. She rubs absently at her wrist, her gaze going focused, suspicious as she looks again at the nebula in the distance. Gradually, she relaxes. Just a memory. Nothing more.
She looks over at the - oh. Not one of the machine creatures, nor another android. Was he... it couldn't be so. Still, she responds carefully.]
Weird? ...Maybe. [A little frown.] This is all weird.
[Here she motions to their environment with a wave of her hand.]
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I mean, yeah.
[She's not a man. It feels like he's been surrounded by men for years, so maybe that's why it jars him to see someone like her now, because she sits apart from familiar surroundings, too pale, too unordinary.]
But I meant something different. I don't know, it just felt — off. Kinda spooky. [His shoulder rolls like he's trying to shake the thought.] Whatever. Who're you?
[His mouth goes taut, debating with himself before the next question rises right after.]
What are you? 'Cause you look... [Dark eyes are, again, wandering.] Not human.
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me looking at a2's char design: how do you work
gotta dress practical AND look sexy
one day...
Initiate
Instead of a mass driver, the ship will launch with an engine that is insanely large to Elster's perspective. That will lead to other things for her to review. A large engine calls for a large reactor. A large reactor means...
You'll regret this later.
Elster's attention turns on collecting her equipment. Engineering, of course. That's what a Penrose LSTR unit is for most of the time. Securing the scanner, the field testing kit, the multitool - well that's already going to account for half of the items the Rule of Six allows her to carry.
She looks up when she hears A2 speaks, expression barely shifting despite the way she focuses on the android. That's not a model she's familiar with. Obviously that should be expected, given everything she's seen since waking up here, but Elster isn't ready to consider it normal yet. She answers, an accent she was once told was cute lacing her voice.]
Is the equipment inappropriate?
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It's just peachy.
[An eyeroll follows this. She looks up finally, eyes widening as she takes in this... android? Machine? A flash of a memory from 2B's data reflects back at her in vivid detail: that machine... thing hatching from a glowing cocoon to land in front of 2B and 9S in a wet and twisted heap of limbs.
The differences in this unit she clocks right away is enough to stop that paranoid train of thought before it gets going. Not unlike an android, but so unlike a YoRHa model or any Resistance model that she's ever seen, that she asks, without tact:]
Whoa. What are you supposed to be?
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A woman with white hair.
A hole in the ground.
Remember our promise.
Her synthetic heart beats too fast. Nothing looks right, except for the pale figure before her, and in that moment who’s to say she’s even perceiving the correct figure. Then her programming crowbars her limbic system back into the correct order of operations.]
An LSTR-model Replika. Designated engineer for small scout vessel Penrose-512.
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imbibe
[He looks surprised, and then excited, honestly, because the first experience with things like this is always magical.]
It's sweet and fizzy. Kinda crackles on your tongue a bit? Real good!
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She finds that she can't figure out how to behave around all of these...all of them. The man's friendly approach makes her look down at the bottle in her hands with an expression that seems too weighty and somber for the task she's given herself.
Taking her first drink, her eyes widen in surprise even before she finishes. It's an explosion of flavor...]
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It's amazing, right?? There's tons of different flavors and stuff, too. This one's cherry!
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reflect
It feels like she's been dreaming for a long time. She's been staring out at stars like this for a long time, hasn't she?
The sound of A2's voice distracts her, and Ariane gives a quick glances out the window before looking back to her.
After so many years of the same ship, the same stars, the same everything the surprise of something new is welcome. ]
...Are you a Replika?
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No. [It's terse, bordering on harsh.
...
......]
I don't know what that is.
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wildcarding it up
For now, she explores while avoiding any and all of the ship's denizens. But despite her best efforts Reze can't help but feel as if someone, something is always there, watching and waiting, seen briefly and only in the reflections of LED screens. Paranoia is already a constant, weaved into her neurons as if it is a biological condition and not a circumstance and occupational hazard. This new place, all of these unknowns and the shadows that seemed to mock her at every turn certainly don't help.
She's frozen in place, staring intently at a large digital screen that takes up most of the wall. Her gaze is unblinking, it's uncanny for a human; there aren't even any tears pooling at the corners of her eyes from her staring contest with the screen. She's lost herself in her skittish pursuits. So much so that she doesn't hear the footsteps approaching. When they're too close to ignore she almost jumps and on instinct whips around to kick whoever is behind her right in the head.
Except of course, this who is made of steel and god knows what else. Her kick does nothing except send a shockwave of pain ringing through her bones. ]
Ow, ow, OW!
[ The stony, emotionless expression from before is gone. She hops on one foot cradling the other with her hands. She is the picture of harmless, girlish misery, night and day from who she seemed to be just seconds ago.
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What she isn't expecting is the kick aimed in her direction. By instinct, A2 lifts her arm to protect her head and the girl's blow connects with her forearm in a dull, metallic thump. A2 stumbles backward — in her current diminished state, she'd only barely been able to react (by her estimations, anyway). For a time she's still, her arm still half-lifted, watching the girl hop around in obvious pain without any visible reaction of her own.
Finally:]
Huh. So you just go around kicking people?
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CW for nail injury a la black swan
oh my god
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1/3
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reflect
even without it, he's quite capable of reading people.
his "belongings" were set off to being beside him, untouched and everything. books, food, whatever they could have shoved at him is visible in the boxes that they had given him to hold such things. it's almost easy to forget, he isn't here alone. with burnt fingers, he brushes them against the glass again. a palm set firmly on it from where he is, like reaching to touch the stars in this beautiful nebula that's before him.
before them.
when she talks, he looks beside him. expression unchanged, blue eyes calm and a comfortable silence. he's a man that often expresses himself in his actions, not words, a man that is considerably odd and not at the same time while he thinks about how to respond to her. her body is unusual, but maybe it reminds him of his own in what he's seeing. the way it sticks out in disrepair similar to his skin along his arms, legs, and a fair bit of his upper body is burnt this charcoal gray color.)
....it is, isn't it?
(his voice is calm, gentle. not even rude, not even staring at her a little too much from wondering to himself if she might need assistance. better not to think about it after the first time, being unintentionally rude was not something he desired to do.
being intentionally rude, however, is another story when it does happen.)
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He was unusual, though A2 supposes she shouldn't be alarmed at that. This entire situation was unlike anything else she'd occurred. Beyond any nightmare the machine network or YoRHa had conjured up for her. But his appearance is a source of curiosity all the same. She imparts the oddities she sees to her memory storage. New data, another point of several she'd run into since awakening on this ship. Her gaze flickers over to all of the random ideas he seems to have around him.
Even she knows better than to ask what's up with him, so:]
Yeah.
[Her brow knits.]
What's with all the stuff?
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