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Version 1.0.0
39 downloads
Makes a number of tweaks, fixes, and improvements to mines. Adds 2 new mine types. Have enemy NPCs use mines in combat. SUMMARY: This is a general overhaul of mines with the goal to improve their usefulness and importance, fix various issues and bugs, and make using and encountering them overall more interesting. Summary of changes made by this mod: • Mines are more deadly. All mines have had their base damage increased by 50% • More “realistic” blast radius. Range of effect has been increased overall but damage now falls off with distance from the mine • Increases the difficulty of detecting mines with Awareness. This makes Awareness more important and mines more of a threat • Mines are now completely invisible until detected. If your character can’t see them, neither should you • Though you still can’t set them off, you can now be damaged by your own mines if within range of a blast, with a reduced DC • Despite their description, in vanilla all tiers of Flash Mines are identical in all but name and cost. This mod fixes this and restores the intended DC difference • Fixes several description errors and inconsistencies • Fixes a bug which would cause incorrect damage to be applied when there are multiple targets of a mine • Integrates the mod No Mines on Malachor by Thor110, which removes the mine models from the gas vents on Malachor • Includes an option to give enemy NPCs the ability to set mines in combat • Includes an option to populate the Dxun jungle with mines, leftover from the Mandalorian Wars • Adds 2 new craftable mines: Shock Mines and CryoBan Mines DETAILS: Damage & Radius All mines have had their base damage increased by 50%. Their credit value has also been increased by 25%. The blast radius has been modified in a few ways. First, the range of effect has been increased for all mines, making it more likely to catch multiple enemies. Second, the damage inflicted by mines will decrease the further you are from the blast, instead of being a flat value at all distances within range. For Flash mines and for the DEX effect from Sonic mines, the DC will fall off in a similar way. The radius also increases slightly with mine tier, as one would expect for stronger explosives. While mines can deal more damage to enemies, you can now also be damaged your own mines as long as an enemy sets it off nearby. However the difficulty class is reduced so it is easier to resist the effects. This will make it a little more challenging to use them for cheesing melee fights, and you’ll want to be strategic to make sure you’re out of the way before they go off. Detection In vanilla, detecting mines is very easy, making them a trivial threat. I personally can’t remember the last time I ran into an undetected mine. On normal difficulty, you don’t actually need any points in Awareness to detect Minor, Average, and Strong mines, giving Awareness very little use. This mod increases the difficulty class for detecting mines by 10, meaning that now only Minor mines can be detected without Awareness, while Average mines require a minimum of 5 points, Strong mines require 10 points, and so on. This is modified by +5 on Hard and -5 on Easy. To compliment the increased detection difficulty, mines will now be completely invisible until your character detects them. This means you will not see the model of the mine on the floor at all before making a successful Awareness check. It doesn’t make sense for you to see them when your character doesn’t, since you could just walk around to avoid them. If you haven’t memorized the location of every mine in the game, you’ll want to invest some points into Awareness to avoid surprises. This mod also includes an option to add mines throughout the Dxun jungle. I think it makes sense for a former battleground of the Mandalorian Wars to have unexploded mines left over, yet there are no mines in the vanilla Dxun jungle outside of the Mandalorian caches. Currently the mines are added via script. Fixes & Inconsistencies In vanilla, all tiers of Flash Mines have the exact same effects, despite being named differently and costing different amounts. According to their descriptions they’re supposed to have different difficulty classes that make them harder to resist, when in reality they all have the lowest DC of the Minor Flash mine. This mod restores the intended DC differences. The base DC of Flash Mines has been increased by 5 across the board to balance the radial drop off in DC. Vanilla descriptions contained a number of errors and inconsistencies. All descriptions have been updated to reflect the mines’ actual effects. Fixes a bug in vanilla where a successful save by one target would also halve the damage of all following targets, compounding if another save was made. The Reflex save against the DEX decrease effect of Sonic mines has been changed to a Will save, to be consistent with the Sonic grenade. Integrates No Mines on Malachor, Only Gas by Thor110, which removes the mine models from the natural gas vents on Malachor. New Mine Types New mines have been added to the game which are craftable at the Lab Station and can be found in some locations. CryoBan Mine: Based on the CryoBan grenade, deals cold damage and can freeze enemies. Some can be found on Peragus. Shock Mine: Deals electrical damage calculated as a base damage + Nd6 roll. It doesn’t fall off with distance and can’t be saved against like other mines. Some can be found on Goto’s Yacht. NPCs Use Mines This mod includes an option to give enemy NPCs the ability to set mines in combat. This includes some Sith Troopers (Grenadiers, Elites, and Commandos), Peragus Mining Droids which can place Sonic Mines, and Fire Suppression Droids which can place CryoBan Mines. They will place mines when appropriate, taking into account their surroundings and location of enemies. INSTALLATION: Note: while it’s likely OK to install mid-game, a new game is recommended for the best experience. To install, run HoloPatcher.exe and select the Main Installation option. (Optional) After installing the main mod, install any of the optional add-ons: “NPCs Use Mines” gives enemy NPCs the ability to use mines, “Mines on Dxun” places mines in the Dxun jungle. Unaltered copies of any modified files will be placed inside a "backup" folder in the location of HoloPatcher.exe. A separate backup folder will be made for each installation. UNINSTALLATION: This mod contains multiple installation parts with separate backup folders. Uninstall in reverse order. 1. Remove the following files from override: 2. Remove 351NAR.mod, 901MAL.mod, 902MAL.mod from the Modules folder. If uninstalling NPCs Use Mines, remove 102PER.mod, 103PER.mod, 105PER.mod, 410DXN.mod, 411DXN.mod, 851NIH.mod, 852NIH.mod from the Modules folder. If uninstalling Mines on Dxun, remove 402DXN.mod. 3. Move any .mod files from backup/Modules to the Modules folder. 4. Move dialog.tlk from the backup folder to the main game folder (outside override). 5. Move any files from backup/Override to the override folder. Alternatively, you can run the uninstall script via HoloPatcher (Tools > Uninstall Mod). COMPATIBILITY: Not compatible with mods that edit k_trap_generic.ncs. Otherwise, should be compatible with most mods. PERMISSIONS: For the most part, you are free to incorporate this mod’s edits into your own mod as long as credit is provided. This does not include files from No Mines on Malachor which have been included in this mod by Thor110’s permission. Redistribution of the files, assets, or edits of the included mod are subject to the terms of the original author. CREDITS: offthegridmorty Thor110 - No Mines on Malachor, Only Gas Thank you to the folks on Discord for scripting help. KOTOR Tool - Fred Tetra TSLPatcher, TLKed - stoffe, Fair Strides HoloPatcher - Cortisol, th3w1zard1 K-GFF - tk102 Holocron Toolset - Cortisol Screenshots use Fire and Ice HD by Cinder Skye and Hi-Res Beam Effects by InSidious -
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Version 1.1.0
165 downloads
Adds sneak attacks and PC Awareness checks to Sith Assassins and Hssiss. SUMMARY: From the in-game description of the Awareness skill: “Awareness governs the ability of a character to spot objects or enemies hidden by Stealth…” If you're like me, with all the Sith Assassins in the game you might have assumed your Awareness played some role in detecting them. Well, I'm here to tell you that Sith Assassins never actually use Stealth, and you've probably never rolled an Awareness check against an enemy in either games. It's all a lie, and you're entitled to compensation. In reality, NPC stealth is an illusion scripted by the game, and your stats play no role in detecting hidden NPCs. Sith Assassins don't have any points in Stealth, and on top of that, they can't even perform sneak attacks. Some assassins! This mod does the following things: - Restores PC Awareness vs Stealth checks on Sith Assassins (and Hssiss) - Gives all Sith Assassins the ability to perform sneak attacks - Adds stealth behavior to the Sith Assassins on Malachor (in vanilla they just wait around uncloaked) This will not only make Awareness a more useful skill but also turn Sith Assassins into more deadly enemies. You will not see them at all until you make a successful Awareness check or until after they've already hit you with a sneak attack. Remember that sneak attacks can happen outside of stealth too, so don't let them flank you! This mod also applies to the Hssiss creatures on Korriban which are the other enemies that “use stealth” in the game. Note this mod may make some parts of the game significantly more challenging, but hopefully also more dynamic and interesting. For balance, all stats and feats are granted based on PC level. A reduced difficulty option is included and recommended if you’re not experienced with the game’s combat. DETAILS: This mod is accomplished through custom scripts which take advantage of the unused Invisibility effect and emulate the hardcoded PC Stealth vs NPC Awareness checks. NPC Stealth was never fully implemented so it is pretty broken and just putting the NPCs in actual Stealth Mode gives erratic and unwanted results. While in line of sight of a stealthed enemy, each of your party members will periodically make an Awareness check against the NPC's Stealth. This is made to be as close as possible to the game’s calculation, accounting for distance, field of view, and whether you're running or in combat. However, the checks occur more frequently than with NPC Awareness (every 6s vs every 20s). If a check succeeds, the enemy will become visible/targetable and will not get to perform a sneak attack (unless they're behind you or you’re stunned). All Sith Assassins in the game are given points into the Stealth skill and a Sneak Attack feat. For balance these are granted on spawn according to the scaled level of the NPC and the Sith Assassin class progression. Sith Assassins are given a Stealth skill equal to their level (with a minimum of 5). In the reduced difficulty option, the Stealth skill is reduced by one third and the Sneak Attack progression is slowed to every 3 levels and capped at rank VII (equivalent to Jedi Watchman progression). INSTALLATION: Please read compatibility notes before installing. To install, open HoloPatcher.exe and run “Main Installation”, choosing either the “Default” or “Reduced Difficulty” option. (Optional) After installing, if you have Peragus Sith Troops to Sith Assassins by Hassat Hunter or Sith Assassins with Lightsabers by Lewok2007 installed, run the included compatibility patch. Unaltered copies of any edited files will be placed in the "backup" folder in the location of HoloPatcher.exe. UNINSTALLATION: 1. Remove the following files from override: 2. Remove 151HAR.mod, 152HAR.mod, 903MAL.mod, 905MAL.mod, and 906MAL.mod from the Modules folder. 3. Move any .mod files from backup/Modules to the Modules folder. 4. Move any files inside backup/Override to the Override folder. Alternatively, you can run the uninstall script via HoloPatcher (Tools > Uninstall Mod). COMPATIBILITY & OTHER NOTES: Compatible with Peragus Sith Troops to Sith Assassins by Hassat Hunter. An optional compatibility patch is included to make the Sith Assassins added by that mod use stealth. Some of the Assassins in the turret minigame will spawn with Stealth vfx. Compatible with Sith Assassins -- With Lightsabers by Shem or alternatively Sith Assassins with Lightsabers by Lewok2007. If using the version by Lewok2007, my mod must be installed last. You should also install the “Peragus Sith Troops to Sith Assassins” compatibility patch since that version combines the previous two mods. Be aware that this mod increases the damage output of Sith Assassins by giving them sneak attacks. Giving them lightsabers will increase the difficulty further. If you’re not experienced with the game’s combat, consider the reduced difficulty option when using these mods together. Should be fully compatible with mods that edit the default creature scripts, like Improved AI by Stoffe. Partially compatible with Trayus Rank Reform, but my mod must be installed last and will overwrite most of the female Sith Assassins added by that mod. The Sith Assassins on Dxun retain vanilla stealth behavior to avoid breaking cutscenes but are still granted Sneak Attack. CREDITS: offthegridmorty KOTOR Tool - Fred Tetra Holopatcher - Cortisol, th3w1zard1 TSLPatcher - stoffe, Fair Strides Holocron Toolset - Cortisol -
1 point
Version 1.0.0
127 downloads
Adds the ability to enter your whole party into stealth without activating solo mode. SUMMARY Why do Sith assassins get to sneak around in groups? Don't they have to turn on solo mode? Now your party can move through the shadows together too. This mod introduces party stealth mode, allowing all eligible party members to simultaneously enter stealth without turning on solo mode. Party stealth mode is activated through an armband which turns on stealth for all party members that are equipped with a stealth unit or otherwise able to use stealth (Force Camouflage, G0-T0). Solo mode will be turned off and your party members will follow you like they normally do. Activating the armband while this mode is on will remove everyone from stealth. See additional notes below. Only the main character can activate this ability and must be able to use stealth. You will get the armband as soon as Kreia joins your party on Peragus. Because of this you'll need a save from before she joins your party for the mod to work properly. However if you're mid-game and want to install this, you can get the armband with the giveitem code "partystealth". INSTALLATION To install, run TSLPatcher.exe. Unaltered copies of any modified files will be placed inside the "backup" folder in the location of TSLPatcher.exe. UNINSTALLATION 1. Remove the following files from override: - spells.2da - baseitem.2da - partystealth.uti - m_imp_prtysneak.ncs - a_addkreia.ncs - ii_ootgmbnds_001.tga 2. If any files were created in the backup folder, move them to override. COMPATIBILITY Should be compatible with most mods assuming they use TSLPatcher or this mod is installed after. OTHER NOTES Party stealth mode is defined by the following conditions: 1. All eligible party members are in stealth mode. 2. Solo mode is turned off. If any of the above conditions are not fulfilled, activating the armband will apply them. If all of the conditions are fulfilled, activating the armband will remove stealth from all party members. You won't be able to toggle stealth for individual party members without turning on solo mode. If you press the normal stealth toggle it will turn on solo mode regardless of whether a character is in stealth or not. Also occasionally characters may exit stealth on their own to perform an action for whatever reason. If any of these things happen, just activate the armband again to reinitialize party stealth. Computer-controlled characters with the Sneak Attack feat will usually perform sneak attacks if you enter combat from this mode. However sometimes they might do another action which breaks stealth first. When changing modules like entering the Ebon Hawk with party stealth on, characters may remain in stealth mode until they perform an action which breaks stealth, such as entering a conversation. I don't expect this to cause major issues but it's probably best to remove party stealth before leaving an area. Bear in mind the developers had reasons for enforcing solo mode, whether for balance or technical issues. I haven't encountered any serious issues but haven't tested every situation. Please let me know of any bugs or weirdness and I'll try to fix it. PERMISSIONS Feel free to use the source code for your own mod as long as you give credit. CREDITS offthegridmorty KOTOR Tool - Fred Tetra TSLPatcher, TalkEd - stoffe, Fair Strides -
1 point
Version 2.0
56,170 downloads
New HD texture for Malek. Resolution of the texture of the head 1024X1024. Resolution of the body texture 2048x2048. The texture is made from scratch. You can choose between blue eyes and red. Really easy to install: copy all the files to your override. Look at the comparison picture to get a better idea: -
1 pointI have no idea why this is one of several files on deadlystream that don't work. I've got an application labelled as INSTALL in the main folder next to tslpatchdata and OPTIONAL, that's blank and doesn't start. I redownloaded it with the antivirus turned off and it's the same thing. Whenever I double click on anything in the extracted folder, it says "the directory name is invalid". Nevermind - seems like WinRar and 7zip are both taking turns with corrupting the files somehow in a way that I just can't figure it out. They extracted fine after 3 different tries and the tsl patcher executable and everything works. No idea what's causing it.
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1 point
Version 1.0.0
27,322 downloads
This mod will replace and update DrdWar texture files. To Install 1. Download: C_DrdWar.rar 2. Copy all files to the Knights of the Old republic's Override folder. (Example location - C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps\common\swkotor\Override) 3. When/if prompted to overwrite files, press okay. 4. If you like the mod; leave a comment or endorse! (It would be much appreciated) Made with love. -
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Version 1.0.0
8,003 downloads
A Mod for Star Wars Knights of The Old Republic 2 Author: N-DReW25 1.0.0 Release Date: 19.02.2022 Installation: Simply Copy and Paste or Drag and Drop ALL the files within the "For Override" into your Star Wars Knights of The Old Republic 2 override folder Uninstall: Remove or Delete the files from your Star Wars Knights of The Old Republic 2 override folder Description: After escaping Peragus, Atton will ask you questions regarding your Lightsaber. Was it a single-bladed hilt or a double-bladed hilt? What colour was it? It wasn't red, was it? All together, you can select a Single or Double-Bladed Red, Blue, Purple, Yellow, Green, Silver, Orange or Viridian Lightsaber. If you can't remember what color it was, the game will pick Cyan for you. But aren't we forgetting something??? At some point in development, Obsidian intended to add Bronze Lightsabers to the game. This colour has been thankfully restored in TSLRCM, however, you cannot select Bronze as the Exile's Lightsaber colour. In addition, you also cannot select the Short-Bladed Lightsaber as your weapon type either (Which is strange as all the coding existed for both of these to be possible). What this mod does is that it will allow the player to also select Bronze coloured or Short-Bladed Lightsabers as the Exile's past weapon. If you select any of the restored colour/hilt then it will appear in the Jedi Temple scene as well as in the hands of Atris later in the game. Known Bugs: This mod shouldn't have bugs but if there is report it on Deadlystream.com Incompatibilities: Report any incompatibilities to me on Deadlystream.com Permissions: Do NOT claim credit for this mod and do not use assets from this mod without my permission Thanks: Ebmar and JCarter426: Feedback Darth Ty: Suggesting I release this as a standalone mod Bioware: For such an amazing game Obsidian: For such an amazing sequel Fred Tetra: For Kotor Tool And everyone who downloads the mod! Legal: THIS MODIFICATION IS NOT SUPPORTED BY BIOWARE/OBSIDIAN ENTERTAINMENT, LUCASARTS, DISNEY OR ANY LICENSERS/SPONSORS OF THE MENTIONED COMPANIES. USE OF THIS FILE IS AT YOUR OWN RISK AND THE ABOVE-MENTIONED COMPANIES OR THE AUTHOR IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DAMAGE CAUSED TO YOUR COMPUTER FOR THE USAGE OF THIS FILE. -
1 point@Sith Holocron requested that I go into some general detail for the community about why the Steam Workshop is generally bad for modding, both to have all the issues laid out and easily referenced, and to clarify some common misconceptions. I can't count the number of issues I've had to troubleshoot as a result of the Workshop and I know its systems and limitations in detail, so I feel fairly qualified to explain what makes the system inadequate compared to the standard methods the community uses for mod installation. I'll first briefly explain how mods installed from the Workshop work, then detail situations where using the Workshop is sensible before explaining why using the Workshop is generally not a good idea. If you'd only like to see an explanation of why you should be downloading mods manually, skip on down to section #3. If you don't use the Steam version of the game with the most recent (Aspyr) patch, needless to say this doesn't really matter for you, as you don't have Workshop support for your title anyway. How the Workshop Works First, it's important to reiterate that the Workshop is only available on the Aspyr patch of the game (not the 'legacypc' beta install option) on Steam. This update causes not a few issues, which means that even if you own the game on Steam you might want to revert it to that legacypc version even before considering modding; an inability to apply new textures to lightsaber hilts, the loss of fog effects, and sometimes extreme game stuttering are but a few of the issues the Aspyr patch causes (though, in fairness, it of course also introduces many useful conveniences, including native widescreen support and controller support). To the topic at hand, however: on a basic level, the Workshop is just a download system for mods. It doesn't truly "install" them as such, as the TSLPatcher would do, it just takes stored data from archives and puts them in a repository which the Aspyr-patched version of the game can read. For example, if you install TSLRCM and two texture mods, the Workshop will take the file data from TSLRCM and those texture mods and separately store them in three different containing folders, which the game will then read on startup. A few of you might already see the problems with this, but we'll get into that in a moment. What the Workshop is Good For Jokes of "nothing" aside, the Workshop is actually very good for single-mod installs. If you want to use TSLRCM and only TSLRCM, go for it--the Workshop will download it and you can run it with no trouble at all. It will even keep the mod dynamically updated for you; the TSLRCM team even realized that this is a much easier and more foolproof method of installation for many users. And, so long as TSLRCM (or TSLRCM + M4-78) is the only mod you're using, it truly works fine. The issue comes in with multi-mod setups, which is how we get to.... Why You Should Avoid the Workshop Put simply, the Workshop was not well-designed when it comes to multi-mod installs, especially in the face of the array of tools the community has developed to encourage mod compatibility over the years, the TSLPatcher being foremost among them. For those that don't know, the TSLPatcher can append strings or modify individual lines within existing files (among a myriad of other things), which allows mods which would otherwise directly overwrite the same files to work together fine, so long as they're not editing the exact same data within the same files. Not only does the Workshop not have this, it also lacks a stunning array of other common-sense multi-mod features: Load orders are based on the order mods are subscribed to, and are overwritten in certain circumstances. This is a big one. Even the most archaic games have always allowed users to control file overwrites, deal with compatibility issues, and selectively prioritize one mod over another by controlling the order in which mods are installed, and oftentimes the specific files installed from mod to mod. Because the Workshop does not truly install mods as such and instead merely sits them in a folder to be read by the game, it's up to the Workshop which mods get read in which order, and which get prioritized. Mods subscribed to first are read first by the system, but because they're downloaded as complete packages ready-to-launch, it's not possible to remove files selectively unless you know exactly where to look--even then, the Workshop may try to repair your install of the mod, replacing files that you may have removed intentionally. Furthermore, no file manifest is given by the Workshop, which makes it that much more difficult to see which mods edit the same content, and incompatibility is a major systemic issue with the workshop as we'll see. Worst of all, mod updates or game reinstalls can entirely disrupt this subscription order and randomize the load order, making it difficult to achieve a stable load order even if you're doing all due diligence. One mod's changes can push out another's. Unlike the installation system typical with major mods where the TSLPatcher can minimize incompatibilities, there's no such protection here. Indeed the opposite, as having two mods with the same .2da file means that one's will inevitably win out, and the other's will lose, and the loser's data will be completely and totally ignored by the game. Not only does this guarantee that some mods are incompatible in function simply due to the Workshop's architecture, it means that you could encounter serious bugs if important files from one mod are overwritten by another. This is part of the reason why TSLRCM and M4-78 had to be combined on the Workshop eventually--despite being completely compatible with one another, the Workshop was ramming them together in incompatible ways. Mods installed manually don't play well with Workshop mods. Jumping off of the above, because mods aren't truly installed with the Workshop, a user can mod their game by installing files onto their game directory in steamapps/common as one would normally do, but also subscribe to mods on the Workshop. Yet the same issues as two mods editing the same file on the Workshop will now occur in this scenario: a loose .2da file in the override will conflict with a .2da file from a Workshop mod and one will completely cancel out the other, rather than taking each other into account whatsoever. This is a big reason why it's a good idea to do all one thing or all another, since combinations like this are invariably more work than simply modding with the right tools from the start. The Workshop has limited selection, and few exclusives. This is an indirect rather than direct issue with the Workshop, but it's worth pointing out all the same. Because of many of the above issues, the Workshop has a rather limited base of modifications, and most modifications released on the Workshop have also seen standard releases, either here on Deadlystream or on the KOTOR 2 Nexus. Because those mod versions would be more compatibility-friendly anyway, there's little reason to use the Workshop just for the sake of the mods on it; there's more variety and less headache installing mods elsewhere. Many Workshop mods are out-of-date and not supported by their authors. This is again (at least partly) an indirect issue, but I feel the need to mention it here because it does have consequences for users. It is very easy to upload mod content to the Workshop even if you aren't the original author, and difficult for original authors to get these reuploads taken down. Regardless of your stances on mod ownership or reuploading, the users who perform these uploads often drop them on the Workshop for quick downloads and kudos-padding and then abandon them, not providing any future updates or support that the original authors would at their typical download locations. This leads already-anemic Workshop content to also frequently suffer from being outdated, and lack proper support, as the uploaders are frequently not the original software authors and may not even understand how the content they've hosted works. While the above is by no means an exhaustive list, it does represent the bulk of the problems with the Workshop. I want to reiterate a final time that the Workshop is an easier install method, as it's a simple one-click solution, but, much like the dark side, it's an easy path that often brings its own problems down the line. It's never worth it to use the Workshop for a couple of mods only to find out that you have a serious incompatibility late into the game, and no clue how to resolve it. Manually downloading mods isn't much more difficult, and neither is their installation, while the compatibility benefits from doing so are significant. I hope this post has helped explain exactly why that is, and encouraged you to look into a traditional install instead. If concerns about compatibility now seem significant to you, or if you're new to modding and worried you'll simply be overwhelmed by the install process for mods, I (though biased) strongly recommend the mod builds. As fully-compatible mod lists, you won't need to worry about crashes from their use, and all the mods listed come with detailed instructions where necessary; spoiler-free builds are even available if you're a first-time player. With the builds as an option, there's really no reason not to skip the Workshop in favor of a much more content-rich and stable experience.
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