Because now that I can, I am definitely going to gather these all in one place. It’s a good excuse to go back and edit things. I’ll be adding reviews as I find them in my archives or as I add them in the future. The same goes for alt-text on the photos - I’m going to be slowly but surely getting that added in there on all prior reviews and will include alt text on all reviews moving forward.
Anime Central 2017
SoyCon 2017
Anime Zap 2018
UChi-Con 2018
Free Comic Book Day 2018
Anime Central 2018
Cogs & Corsets: A Steampunk Happening 2018
Bloomington Normal Video Game Convention 2018
HPLD Nerd Con 2018
Olde English Faire 2018
Anime Midwest 2018
Peoria Geekfest 2018
Ignite Peoria 2018
Springfield Micro Con 2018
Peoria Comic Book Convention October 2018
TFCon Chicago 2018
Anime Zap 2019
UChi-Con 2019
PeoriaCon 2019
QuadCon Peoria Spring 2019
Anime Central 2019
Anime Expo 2019 (Virtual Attendance)
Anime Iowa 2019
Springfield Comic Expo 2019
QuadCon Peoria Halloween 2019
Anime Zap 2020
Sixty-Six Games Expo/BN Video Game Convention 2020
Peoria Comic Book Convention Jan 2020
UChi-Con 2020
PeoriaCon 2020
Cogs & Corsets: A Steampunk Happening 2021
QuadCon Peoria, June 2021
Anime Iowa 2021
Anime Magic 2021
QuadCon Peoria, September 2021
PeoriaCon 2021
QuadCon Peoria, December 2021
Anime Zap 2022
PeoriaCon 2022
Anime Central 2022
Cogs & Corsets A Steampunk Happening 2022
Anime Iowa 2022
Anime Magic 2022
TFCon Chicago 2022
PeoriaCon 2023
Anime Central 2023
Illinois Game Con 2023
Game On Peoria High School Gaming Expo 2023
Otakon 2023
Anime Magic 2023
QuadCon Peoria November 2023
PeoriaCon 2024
Anime Aki Con 2024
PeoriaCon 2025
PeoriaCon 2026
And while not a con review, this post has a list of apps I’ve used to save a little extra change towards events to cover minor expenses.
They won't get you rich, but every penny helps when you budget for cons
I know I said something about this a few years ago, but it still holds true: Saving $$ any way that you can for a con is a good thing. Maybe you only net $20 extra from an app - but that's the tip for housekeeping covered. Or your coffee for the long commute to the con. Or your day's parking expenses. Any number of little things. So, I'm including referral links for the apps I actually have used.
Rewards for receipts
Receipt Hog pays you to upload receipts and take surveys. Sure, it's pennies on the dollar, but I have had this one for a couple of years now and cashed out about $40-$50 to my PayPal. Doesn't sound like much, sure, but it takes maybe 2 minutes from my day, just a couple days a week. Download and enter code lin45051 to earn a special bonus when you upload your first receipt. https://app.receipthog.com/r/lin45051
I also use Fetch. Same principle: Snap receipts, slowly build points to gift cards. They've also got gaming offers, which I'm only just now starting to try out, so I can't say for sure how that will go. Sign up with this link, and we'll both get a bonus on your first receipt. https://referral.fetch.com/vvv3/referralqr?code=K3WXB3
Surveys / Gaming
For this, I mainly use InboxDollars - though again, ReceiptHog has done surveys and Fetch has gaming. InboxDollars also does receipt points - $0.01 per receipt snapped, for a limited number of receipts per day. You can earn more pennies if you buy certain products from certain vendors but I honestly usually forget about this aspect of InboxDollars and mainly do the gaming offers. Pay attention to what's *really* on offer - a lot of them claim you can get "Up to 102.34" but part of that is "buy X item for $9.99 and get $4.99 back"
But I've found that most of the lower-paying offers (like $60 or less) have been pretty achievable even if the gaming can be a slog, depending. I haven't had as much luck with surveys lately, sadly.
I think over the years I've had InboxDollars, I've earned about $300.
Food
Ok. I'll be straight, right now. I haven't tried to use either of these at a con. Or while shopping for a con. But I *have* tried them and found them to be worth it.
Martie is one of those sites that's going to sell you food and other items at a discount, with a minimum purchase threshhold of $50 to get the free shipping. So be careful of that. But you will find all kinds of snacks and organic foods and other oddities on there. I used it to snag some kids' stuff and giftable stuff. The food might be nearing its expiry date but it will still be in-date when it gets to you, don't worry there.
Score big on daily overstock deals at up to 80% off! Shop fresh deals on pantry, beauty, and home goods daily with no membership or subscrip
I’ve also used Too Good To Go. It's purpose is to help save good food from going to waste by partnering with restaurants and other food vendors to offload stuff that's still there at the end of the day like leftovers or day-olds, etc. I tried it with a gas station and ended up with a donut, sub sandwich, chips, and a brownie for $4+ tax. Worth it! : https://tgtg.onelink.me/OGjG/htdymhbt
Gas
Upside is legit. And you can now get some discounts on groceries and restaurants, too. I use this one every damn week.
Download Upside with my link or use my code KATIE233877 to get 50¢ per gallon extra cash back on your first gas fill-up and 20% extra cash back on your first restaurant or grocery purchase! https://upside.app.link/KATIE233877
I'll add more apps if I find more that have referral links. In the meantime, I also suggest looking into rewards apps for restaurants and gas stations you go to regularly. Or apps like Ad It Up, which is on the T-Mobile network, and rewards you for gaming with discounts on your phone bill. And of course, look into travel rewards accounts.
Hopefully, one of these helps someone save a little more for their next con.
Hey guys LiveJournal is rumored to be going down permanently, this guy is archiving pages and communities for people for free if you ask. He has a program to do it yourself but will help you if you only have a Mac and can't run it or something. Takes some time but 100% legit
LJ ArchivrI helped create an application to help those interested in Archiving archive their user & community Livejournals. You can find
Well, this is overdue, seeing as we're now in April...
Anyway, PeoriaCon 2026 took place March 7 & 8. 2026 at the Peoria Civic Center in Peoria, IL. PeoriaCon is local for me and @lechevaliermalfet, which is a good thing as we now have 2 little ones to either leave with a sitter or tow around. This year, our elder kiddo stayed with Grandma and the younger kiddo came along for the show.
One complaint that I have about PeoriaCon is that there are no weekend badges, even though this is a 2-day con, with panels and events on both days. You need to pay for each day separately. In addition, you're probably going to be paying for parking each day. For two adults, even with our kiddo being free as he's well under the age of 10, that adds up fast.
We attended on Sunday. Getting in was easy - the line was basically non-existent, though people were steadily buying tickets. The venue has a strict bag policy - only small or clear bags unless you have a medically necessary or diaper bag. We had a diaper bag with us, since we had an infant. The bag was subjected to inspection before we were allowed to make our way through the metal detectors and enter the convention hall.
We hung with @shbumi and Cody for the event, though there was a lot of wandering around separately.
PeoriaCon is still largely a vendor con, 8 years in. There's plenty of variety for shopping, some celebrity guests to meet and greet (if you choose), gaming, and a small area for panels. And the cosplay contest, which has grown enough to spread between adults on Saturday and youth on Sunday. I'm going to say now that while it would have been fun to watch, we did not stick around for the contest on Sunday because our son was getting fussy and well, baby's needs come first.
There was plenty of cosplay on display but I don't have any photos of any individual cosplayers from this year. I do, however, have photos of awesome nerdy vehicles.
I think we were at the con for approximately four hours or so. We mostly connected with @someoldmemory who was working the event with another friend. I saw several artists and vendors who have been to PeoriaCon before and who show up to many Central IL events. It was nice to see that many had new artwork available. Unfortunately, having littles constricts the budget quite a bit. Our only pieces of con swag this time around were a UHF poster and a Garrus duck.
There was Pokemon Go, which I did indulge in. Cons are about the only time I play anymore, actually. So that should tell you when I last signed in, lol.
We did not attend any panels this year, seek celebrity interaction, or game, though we have done that in previous years.
PeoriaCon was a fun escape for a day, though I do wish again that they had a weekend pass option and that they felt more like a fully fleshed out con as opposed to a dealer hall with add-ons. Still, I'm glad it exists and I hope it grows. The Civic Center - bag policy aside - is a fantastic venue and the con currently only uses a small fraction of the available space.
okay I'm gonna need you to explain what "thawing" a cheese means to you. is it bringing a cheese out lf the fridge and wait for it to be room temperature? is it heating it up so it's gooey and soft? i need to understand
No the cheese isn't frozen or cold. I don't know what other way to describe it as other than thawing? It makes a noise occasionally and when it stops it's usually done thawing
What process are you doing to thaw cheese. where do you keep the cheese such that it's not thawed. Which physical properties of the cheese change between thawed and unthawed
no no no i refuse to let this rest until i fully understand
so you. FREEZE the cheese? and then when you want to use it you. THAW it. that's what I'm getting from this conversation. is this correct??
also this might be important: what type of cheese are we talking about. cottage cheese? hard cheese? fake cheese (cheddar)? because i think i might be picturing the wrong type of cheese
What I don't understand is the PROCESS. like what is the ORIGINAL STATE OF THE CHEESE. is it just the state it is in when you buy it in the store. or is it cold. or is it room temperature. or is it warm.
and what is the exact process?? microwaving?? warm water??? just leaving it outside in room temp?????
please I seriously need to understand the PROCESS the cheese undergoes. if step-by-step instructions need to be spelt out then so be it but i really REALLY wanna know what's going on
Unfortunately I can't. I'm at work right now, and I'm heading out on a trip in 2 days so I already cleared out my fridge so nothing'll spoil while I'm gone. But trust me I'd absolutely do that if I could. This is really frustrating and I GUARANTEE if you all saw it you'd immediately recognize what thawing cheese is. I seriously think I'm just unintentionally using a niche regional name for it which is causing all this confusion
ill have you all know that the entire time I was gone i couldnt stop thinking about this so im DETERMINED to show you all not only WHAT thawing cheese is, but also what the SOUND is so i can FINALLY have an answer to my ORIGINAL GOD DAMN POLL
i have nothing in my fridge and im tired rn from driving 6 hours so instead of going to the store i'm just gonna swing by my aunt's place and see if she has any cheese that needs thawing
the prime suspects in this case are gandalf the gray and gandalf the white and monty python and the holy grail's black knight and benito mussolini and the blue meanie and cowboy curtis and jambi the genie robocop the terminator captain kirk darth vader lo pan superman every single power ranger bill s preston and theodore logan spock the rock doc ock and hulk hogan
In 2024, we only did Sunday. For 2025, we only did Saturday, March 29 (yesterday - yeah, I'm actually doing a timely review for once). I really hope they introduce weekend-rate pricing next year, since it's a bit pricey to buy single-day tickets for 2 adults for both days ($17/person/day this year) when you consider the con is still roughly 85% vendors and artists vs 15% all the rest of con stuff.
Despite that price tag, it's clear there's a demand for the event. When @lechevaliermalfet @pseudospectre , myself, and kiddo arrived at the Peoria Civic Center about half an hour after the con started, there was a decent line to purchase admission.
I love that it shows the event is growing in popularity, because my group got there only like 30 minutes after the con started and there was a steady line for the first couple of hours whenever we looked.
There was a nice, easy-to-understand info table just outside the entry doors, after you got your plain red wristband from the box office. I heard today's were blue and I was relieved to know there were measures in place to prevent people from trying to ghost the con on Day 2.
Once inside, they had an amazing array of vendors. The Civic Center really does have decent space in the exhibit hall for events.
However, any time I've been there for a con, the gaming area sound overpowers everything else. Yesterday was no exception - there were times the audio for the game tournament made it difficult to interact with the vendors next to it as you could hardly hear them.
They did dedicate a decent amount of space to both video gaming and tabletop, which was nice to see - I feel like the two areas were fairly comparable, size-wise.
Also, shoutout to @someoldmemory and another friend of ours, "Bob", who were running a booth for their employer.
We walked away from that booth with a Labyrinth movie poster. Now I need to figure out where to display it!
It was nice to see the Ghostbusters return to the con again, and their vehicle was an obvious photo draw for many attendees. I wouldn't be shocked if Scott Inness' booth also attracted a lot of photo ops, with or without the guest himself. I don't think I've ever been to an event where a guest of honor had such an impressive booth.
Speaking of guests, I did think they had a decent variety within the small handful that they had and I did overhear a group of attendees mention that they'd travelled 3 hours just for one of their members to get a voice actor autograph. PeoriaCon's size means that no celebrity line was ever too long if you wanted an opportunity for a photo or autograph, though I passed on those this year.
The designated panel area was far smaller, maybe with seats for about 25-30ish people? I admit, that's not unreasonable for a con this size, based on my experience. But the curtain walls and microphones for the panelists didn't always do *quite* enough to combat the noise from the gaming tournament. I ended up passing on most of the panels for this reason, only dropping in on the Ghostbusters Peoria one at 2pm. Local author Sylvia Shults was one of the panelists and she has done many local cons over the years. I'll always enjoy hearing her stories on the old state asylum.
But to backtrack before that...kiddo is now 14 months old and she was *not* tolerating the noise-cancelling headphones that she wore at Anime Aki Con in 2024. And she wasn't interested in sleeping through the event, like she did for PeoriaCon 2024. So we had a grumpy baby for the majority of the day. I actually had to take her out of the con floor and into the food vendor / dining area to attempt to quiet her. Our group ended up having an early-ish lunch of overpriced snack / quick food (popcorn, hotdogs, burgers, nachos, you get the gist) as that was what was on hand.
@lechevaliermalfet and I *tried* to get overpriced sodas from the vending machines and that promptly card our cards flagged for fraud.
So that led to a fun 30 minutes on the phone with the credit union in the middle of our con day. In the end, the poor rep couldn't figure out why the machines were flagging as fraud (he had me try using the cards while I was on the phone with him after I verified the transactions). Our debit card was unlocked, the credit card was escalated to the risk team and I was advised to avoid using it and to visit an ATM to get cash out instead.
Well, we tried to find the silver lining that we would absolutely be forced to really consider our con swag for this year and so it was totally fine that we had to keep circulating the vendors to keep the grumpy baby calm. Because it meant we *really* got to consider our options.
Like coffee. Cosplay ducks. Art galore. Local authors. Jewelry makers. And more!
Yeah, it was hard making choices. I did end up with some of that coffee, because the vendors were lovely people and they had free hot samples of many of the flavors. Probably spent a good 10 minutes at their booth talking to them. They're Itasha Coffee and they'll be at Acen 2025 and Anime Magic 2025.
There was a robotics demo in the con hall to observe as well.
Problem is, kiddo wasn't interested in staying still in any area. And at one point, she was cranky enough we again chose to leave the con hall. This time, we decided to attempt an ATM so that I could have some cash on hand.
More bad news. The ATM (which was connected to our credit union) was refusing transactions. Cue another phone call to said credit union, and another 15 minutes on the phone with a rep looking into the issue. Turns out, that ATM had lost signal and wasn't processing *any* transactions. I wonder how many attendees ran into that issue...
Well, we had at least one working card. We went back in and finished our shopping. Then, when the cosplay competition came around, @lechevaliermalfet walked our daughter around the con floor in the stroller while I watched the contest.
I'd say the cosplay contest was probably a personal highlight for me. Saturday's was the Craftsmanship contest. Lots of awesome cosplays on display and many contestants really threw themselves into portraying their chosen character. I love that the contest has grown so large over the years that it can be divided as it was, over 2 days and between Craftsmanship (Sat) and Youth (Sun). And that Craftsmanship was further divided into the Novice, Journeyman, and Master categories. I also appreciated that there was a Judges' Choice and a Best in Show option, in addition to the 1st place for each category. (It was hard to get photos of the winners going up, sorry!)
I was surprised that Best in Show and Judges' Choice went to the same contestant - and that's no shade on them! Their cosplay was very well put together and far surpasses anything I've done over my con attending years. I know every contest has its own criteria and people can win multiple awards; I'm just used to Judges' Choice being awarded to those who didn't meet the criteria for any other award but that the judges still felt deserved a shoutout.
With the contest concluded, PeoriaCon was done for the day. And we were done for the weekend.
On the whole, despite a grumpy baby (who left with con swag of her own, getting a couple free stickers over the course of the day) and card issues, it was a fun PeoriaCon. I'm looking forward to next year, though I really hope they introduce weekend passes by then.
And yes, I did break out the PoGo. I barely play anymore, but it feels like the thing to do at cons.
I'm also sharing an abridged version of this review on the Anime Central discord / Peoria subreddit, so if any of the wording / pics seem familiar to you - that's why.
This is long overdue. Anime Aki Con held its inaugural event on October 19, 2024 at the Holiday Inn in East Peoria, IL. They had a nice Facebook and local news campaign for a bit beforehand, to spread the word.
And due to the reputations of certain cons in the area, Anime Aki Con actually posted a disclaimer on their FB page that they have no affiliations or ties to any other event in the area. I have a feeling that helped them gain support as well.
But anyway, down to business...
@lechevaliermalfet and I went and took our daughter with us. Originally, @shbumi hoped to attend with us, but was unable to make it. She had won admission in a pre-con contest and the con staff graciously allowed her to transfer the tickets to us.
The registration table and the raffle table were both clearly visible and staff were friendly and helpful. Many were in cosplay for the day, but they weren't hard to find if you needed them.
Once we were in, we decided to bypass the panel and gaming rooms (in fact, we never did end up looking in on gaming - whoops!) and head straight for the artists and dealers.
This was a hotel con, so space was...a tad cramped. @lechevaliermalfet and I took turns walking through and browsing, while the other waited in the hall with our daughter in her stroller, watching the foam fighting going on outside.
Foam fighting was led by a local group, the Peoria Belegarth Realm of Grond. They've done foam fighting at other local events, and it was nice to see them here.
But of course, we didn't just come to spend the whole day shopping!
We did catch both of the sword fighting panels.
The panel room was decently sized for the event. The 12pm Sword Demonstration was more sparsely attended and I suspect that was mainly due to the timing. It was approaching the lunch hour, after all.
There is an Italian steakhouse on-site at the hotel that's open to the general public, but we went home for lunch after the first panel. We wanted to give kiddo a brief break from the noise. She was sporting noise-cancelling headphones for the day, but it's still a lot for a baby who wasn't even a year old at the time.
Coming back for lunch, we were there in plenty of time for the second sword-related panel, which was more well-attended.
Once this panel was done, kiddo was making it clear she was done for the day. @lechevaliermalfet took her outside to look at the bull sculpture outside the hotel's convention center entry.
He then drove her around to keep her calm while I watched the cosplay contest. I really have a great husband, y'all.
The contest was the best-attended event of the day, I suspect. I admit that I didn't go to each and every panel, but I can't recall seeing the room as packed as it was for the contest at any earlier time that I went by it during the day.
They had first, second, and third place trophies available.
After the contest, the con founders gave a brief talk - not so long you could really call it a closing ceremony, but just enough to let attendees know how much they valued the community support.
The con hasn't posted exact numbers, just that attendance was over 250 for the day. Not bad at all for a first year event! They're back again in East Peoria in October of this year (2025) and have already moved to a larger venue (Embassy Suites) and expanded to 2 days.
I'm happy the Peoria area has another anime con and I wish them the best of luck as they grow.
Oh, and as far as Pokemon Go is concerned...I'm sure I opened it up, as I do at every con, but I don't have any screenshots saved that I can find.
I really hope they refill this merch design because I want a hoodie with this sooo bad
This podcast has become my new favorite and I've been binging it since I discovered it in October/November of 2024. I still have 79 episodes to go to catch up...
Oh it's even worse than what the article talks about
From one of the "rescue's" FB comments:
This video from their adoption event shows that to be blatantly untrue, and at 5:30-5:42 you see the infected puppies already looking sick and lethargic
https://www.facebook.com/MAMCORescue/videos/414484347625676/
And this rescue is also known for being a "retail rescue" (a 'rescue' that purchases animals from puppy mills to then transport to other states to immediately 'adopt' for higher fees, and often do not vet the puppies properly or provide important medical care re: vaccinations, deworming, etc)
The "rescue" was forced to close 3 days AFTER the adoption event, so I guarantee most, if not all of the 95 dogs they were warehousing were saliva exposed
Blaming the state public health office for everyone being concerned and not wanting to take in potential rabies vectors
I seriously hope this "rescue" is forced to close permanently, and gets sued out the ass over this.
PLEASE, anyone who might have been affected: as someone who has had rabies shots they are NOT THAT BAD, have no serious side effects, and really won't cause you any trouble other than some arm pain. And I am talking about the post-exposure prophylactic, which is what you would get.
RABIES WILL KILL YOU AND IT WILL SUCK THE WHOLE TIME YOU ARE DYING. There are not a statistically significant number of people who have ever survived it. You ****WILL**** ! ****NOT**** ! This is not a "wait and see what happens" situation.
The worst case if you have not been exposed and you get the PEP is that you get some shots you don't need. The ONLY case if you have been exposed and you don't get the PEP is that you will die, slowly, painfully, and having the worst time.
So Dashcon is in the air again, and a lot of people have been talking about the how and the why and the reasons for its demise. And a lot of people have been talking about the sociological and fandom reasons why it didn't work out, and while I don't think anyone is wrong about their theories, there's something most people just don't understand.
Almost every con you have ever attended has been bare inches from total collapse.
I say this as someone with decades of con work. Of being a vendor. Of being a volunteer. Of talking to other con runners.
Every con I've ever interacted with has been a few bad choices away from not making it through the weekend. Financial choices, PR choices, guest choices, staffing choices. The number of ways that a convention can fail is STAGGERING, and the problem is, cons that have been around for a long time, that seem successful, that seem stable, have gotten very good at hiding their problems.
They still have the problems. They're just good at hiding them. And that's the important part. As long as the attendees do not KNOW that you're in full meltdown mode, you are stable. If you can hold it together, if you can distract people, if you can just make it through Sunday, you're golden.
Otherwise, you will be Dashcon, and a thousand other cons that thought that this would be easy. That they just had to put up a website and book a hotel ballroom and let the money roll in.
Things I have seen/experienced/have first hand knowledge of:
-Workers set off sprinkler system the day before con.
-Fire alarm causes entire building to be evacuated.
-Masquerade MC gets into a physical fight with a teenager in a restaurant outside of the con mere hours before said masquerade, and has to be replaced.
-Con chair redoes the con branding entirely so he has an excuse to fire his ex-girlfriend, who cosplayed the con mascot.
-Con goers set off fire extinguishers in hotel elevator, con is charged for this.
-Tax agents show up on Friday morning and start going from table to table, demanding tax licenses from every single vendor, including teenagers in Artist Alley, who have no idea they needed such a thing.
-Major guest shows up drunk to a major panel and has a screaming meltdown on teenage fans.
-Two cosplayers dressed as special forces operatives INCLUDING PROP WEAPONS, are walking home in a major city at night. Cops pull over and demand that they get on the ground. Cosplayers run. Somehow, miraculously, they do not get shot. Police dept then sends a major police presence to the con the following day and attempts to bill the con for the police detail.
-Con organizer does not read convention center contract in full; ends up with an unexpected bill of almost 20K more than expected.
-Multiple cases of vendors getting into physical fights.
-Bomb threats. The worst one involved the local police, the FBI, and an Australian police force.
-Sharing convention center space with an Obama speech.
-Sharing convention center space with 'Walmart Presents: Bass Pro Fishing Challenge."
-The hotel double booking the space with a college Fraternity party. Leading to a physical fight between drunken frat boys and a bunch of cosplayers dressed as ninjas, forever remembered as 'the battle of the bros vs. the Narutos.'
-The hotel booking a wedding reception in the same venue. Neither the con goers or the wedding goers were happy.
-MASSIVE amounts of counterfeit badges
-Hotel flooding.
-Freak storm trapping congoers in the hotel.
-Freak storm trapping so many congoers in the hotel that the hotel staff locked down all floors, forbidding people from moving between floors or spaces, giving rise to very real fears of structural problems.
-Drunks. Seizures. Drug overdoses. Physical altercations.
-Con refusing to cross a picket line of striking workers and being nearly bankrupted by the penalty fees
-Three separate instances of major violence (mass shooting in another state, a bomb going off within view of the convention center, a person stopped from attending another event in the same facility with a car trunk full of guns and ammunition) happening so close to the convention that major policy changes had to happen with next to no notice.
Conventions are incredibly complex. They are incredibly time intensive. They require a massive amount of man power and a lot of knowledge to do right.
having been on a concom in the past for over a decade and having run a conference myself, this is incredibly accurate.
The way I ended up on a concom involved a complex near disaster that centered around an airwall.
One convention I went to happened in the midst of one of the earlier massive wildfire seasons and the AQI indoors was probably 200. Outside it was closer to 500.
If you go to a lot of cons and you see them done reasonably well by people who seem to know what they're doing, they look pretty easy. The number of moving parts is staggering.
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