# Liquidation Heatmap (En)

## Liquidation Heatmap — Trader's Guide

This guide teaches you how to **read, understand, and trade with** the **Liquidation Heatmap** indicator on the MRD chart. Content is educational, not financial advice. Markets can reverse at any moment — always use stop-loss and disciplined risk management.

> **Philosophy of this indicator:** markets do not move toward "support" or "resistance" in the classical sense — markets move **toward liquidity**. Wherever leveraged positions are trapped, that place is a magnet. The Liquidation Heatmap shows you that **magnet map** in real time.

***

<figure><img src="/files/PSSGsTF00khr0IeBjhsw" alt=""><figcaption></figcaption></figure>

### Table of Contents

1. What is the Liquidation Heatmap?
2. Reading the main heatmap
3. The right-side Profile — liquidity reservoir
4. The peak line — central magnet
5. "Filled" circles — swept zones
6. BUY / SELL signals
7. Reading the liquidity wave
8. Trading philosophy — DO NOT use classic TA
9. Sample trade setups
10. Settings reference — every control explained
11. Tips and common mistakes
12. Glossary

***

### 1. What is the Liquidation Heatmap?

The Liquidation Heatmap renders a **price × time heat map** directly on the chart canvas, representing the density of **leveraged positions at risk of liquidation** at every price level. Two faces of this map:

* **Heat ABOVE price** — where **Short** positions are stacked. They get liquidated if price rises into them.
* **Heat BELOW price** — where **Long** positions are stacked. They get liquidated if price drops into them.
*

```
<figure><img src="/files/MfMqgFnHwoo7TQAz8JvM" alt=""><figcaption></figcaption></figure>
```

**How to read the map:**

| Color                  | Heat level | Meaning                                                         |
| ---------------------- | ---------- | --------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Purple / dark blue     | low        | Few positions trapped — thin zone, price passes through easily. |
| Bright green / cyan    | medium     | Meaningful liquidity — worth noting.                            |
| Yellow / bright yellow | high       | **Magnet zone** — the market has strong reason to travel there. |

**This indicator does NOT tell you:**

* The next direction in the next second (this is not an immediate buy/sell signal).
* Executed (filled) trade volume — that is the Footprint chart's job.
* Limit orders sitting in the book — that is the Orderbook Heatmap's job.

**Plan requirement:** Premium or Ultimate.

***

### 2. Reading the main heatmap

<figure><img src="/files/OUruD41UcA5eVqZv5xx1" alt=""><figcaption></figcaption></figure>

#### 2.1 Two kinds of "heat trails"

You will see two shapes:

* **Long trail extending across time** — a liquidity level formed several candles back that is **still alive** (price has not swept through it yet). This is a **waiting magnet**.
* **Short trail ending abruptly** — the liquidity level was **swept** on that candle. After being swept, the zone **loses its pull** — it is no longer a target.

> **Core rule:** only trails that **extend to the current candle** still have trading value. A broken trail is history — do not use it for stops or targets.

#### 2.2 Color intensity is relative to the viewport

When you zoom or scroll, brightness is **renormalized to the visible range**. This means:

* A trail that looks "very bright" when zoomed out is **not automatically** the brightest in the market — it is just the brightest **in view**.
* When you zoom in close to price, small trails that previously looked faint may flare up — that is relative scaling, not new data.

→ Before any entry: **zoom to the timeframe you actually trade** (e.g. for 4H swing, zoom to show \~30–50 candles), then read intensity.

#### 2.3 Hover for details

Move your cursor onto a heat trail → a tooltip shows:

* **Price** at the trail's center.
* **Estimated position size** (formatted as K / M / B).
* **Intensity** (%) relative to the brightest visible trail.
* **Side**: long (trail below price) or short (trail above price).
* **Trail age** — older trails that have not been swept are more trustworthy (they have survived multiple tests).
* **Active** — whether the trail is still alive or already swept.

***

### 3. The right-side Profile — liquidity reservoir

<figure><img src="/files/qFV8vqpEEsptm7qBmoQq" alt=""><figcaption></figcaption></figure>

When **Profile** is enabled, a column of horizontal bars appears at the right edge of the chart. Each bar summarizes **the total live liquidity** at that price band — independent of time, only counting what is still alive.

#### Reading the profile

| Element                     | Meaning                                                                  |
| --------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| Green bar (long)            | Long positions trapped there — will be swept if price drops.             |
| Red bar (short)             | Short positions trapped there — will be swept if price rises.            |
| One **abnormally long** bar | This level is the session's **primary liquidity reservoir** — magnet #1. |
| Number label inside the bar | Estimated position size (K / M / B).                                     |
| Faint yellow background     | Marks the **profile peak** — the largest reservoir right now.            |

> **Quick reading drill:** scan the profile top-to-bottom and pick the 1–2 longest bars. Those are the **high-probability price targets** for the next few hours. Short bars are noise — ignore them.

***

### 4. The peak line — central magnet

Together with the profile, a **dashed horizontal line spanning the entire chart** appears at the price with the **densest liquidity right now**. This is the session's **main magnet line**.

How to read the peak:

* Price far from peak → tendency to **return** to the peak to "refill" liquidity.
* Price sitting at the peak → temporary equilibrium — wait for a break.
* Peak has **shifted** within the last few candles → the liquidity structure is rotating — be cautious about new entries, wait for the peak to stabilize.

> The peak line is NOT "support" or "resistance". It is the **center of liquidity gravity** — price tends to be **pulled toward** it, not **bounced off** it. Correct usage: use the peak as a **target (TP)**, not as an entry trigger.

***

### 5. "Filled" circles — swept zones

When **Filled** is enabled (on by default), you will see **circles** appear on the chart. Each circle marks **a large heat zone that was just swept**.

| Property          | Meaning                                                         |
| ----------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Larger circle     | More liquidity was swept.                                       |
| **Orange** circle | Just swept a **Long liquidation** zone (price dropped into it). |
| **Blue** circle   | Just swept a **Short liquidation** zone (price rose into it).   |
| Number inside     | Position size that was "settled".                               |

#### Role in trading

1. **Confirms an in-progress wave**: a sequence of same-color circles appearing in a row = the market is **chain-sweeping** stops → the wave is in its acceleration phase, not about to reverse.
2. **Confirms wave exhaustion**: a single **very large** circle after a long move = "final shot", often paired with a short-term reversal. The just-swept zone is **drained**, no reason for price to return and test it.
3. **Eliminates targets**: if your TP target already had a circle appear earlier → **remove it from the list**, move to the next target.

> The liquidity rule: **swept = drained**. Do not expect price to come back and "test" a zone whose stops were already cleaned out.

#### The "Filled" slider

The **Filled** slider filters how many circles are shown:

| Position | Number of circles | When to use                                                          |
| -------- | ----------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Many     | High              | When you want to inspect every small sweep — fits intraday scalping. |
| Med      | Moderate          | Balanced — most traders use this.                                    |
| Few      | Low               | Keep only significant sweeps — fits swing trading.                   |
| Min      | Very low          | Only the largest sweeps — read the big picture.                      |

***

### 6. BUY / SELL signals

When **Signals** is enabled (on by default), **arrows** appear on the chart:

* **▲ "BUY" arrow in green** — placed **below** the candle body.
* **▼ "SELL" arrow in red** — placed **above** the candle body.

#### What these signals say

The signal does **not** mean "price is about to go up / down". It says:

> "There is a **large liquidity reservoir** to the \[up / down] side, and current momentum is **leaning correctly** for price to travel there."

In other words:

* **BUY** = the market has reason to **go up** to sweep short liq above.
* **SELL** = the market has reason to **go down** to sweep long liq below.

#### How to trade the signals

1. **Do not enter immediately** on the candle with the arrow — that is the **trigger** candle, not the **entry** candle.
2. **Wait for 1–2 follow-up candles** to confirm direction (a same-direction candle, no long opposing wick).
3. Enter at **market** after confirmation, or place a **limit one step back** into a small heat zone.
4. **TP**: the brightest heat cluster in the signal's direction (the arrow points toward it).
5. **SL**: just past the **nearest filled circle** on the opposite side, or below/above the trigger candle — choose the wider option, but not excessively wide.

> Signals are most effective **inside a trend**, not in sideways chop. Sideways → skip, wait for a range break.

***

### 7. Reading the liquidity wave

This is the **most important** section — it separates traders who use this indicator professionally from those who just "watch the lights".

#### 7.1 The four phases of a liquidity wave

```
          ┌── Phase 1 ─┐ ┌─ Phase 2 ─┐ ┌─── Phase 3 ───┐ ┌─ Phase 4 ─┐
                                                                
  Heat    ▒▒▒▒░       ▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒    ▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓        (swept)
  above              ░░░░░░░░░░     ▒▒▒▒▒▒          (empty)
                                  
  Price   →→→         →→→→         ↗↗↗ (running)   ↘ (small reversal)
                                  
  Heat    ▒▒▒▒░       ▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒    ░░░░             ▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒
  below                                              (new reservoir
                                                     building)
```

| Phase            | Description                                                                         | Action                                               |
| ---------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------- |
| 1 — Accumulation | Heat thickens on one side. Price drifts sideways.                                   | **Observe**, do not enter.                           |
| 2 — Imbalance    | Heat clearly thicker on one side, thin on the other.                                | Prepare entry plan in the heavy direction.           |
| 3 — Running      | Price accelerates, filled circles appear in sequence.                               | **Ride the wave**, trail your stop, do not TP early. |
| 4 — Empty        | Heat on the just-swept side is **gone**. Heat on the opposite side starts building. | **Take profit**, or reverse the trade.               |

#### 7.2 Signs the wave is mid-flight (hold the trade)

* A **bright heat cluster** still exists in the direction of the move.
* Filled circles in sequence, **same color**, growing in size.
* The peak line **has not yet been crossed** by price.
* Profile: the reservoir ahead is **still larger** than the reservoir behind.

#### 7.3 Signs the wave is over (take profit)

* A **very large** filled circle appears alone — the final shot.
* Heat ahead is **empty** — no more fuel.
* The peak line **has been crossed** and now sits behind price (uptrend case) or above price (downtrend case).
* Heat **on the opposite side** starts brightening — a new reservoir is building.

#### 7.4 Signs to NOT trade (stand aside)

* Heat is **balanced on both sides** of price — the market is undecided.
* Profile is **flat**, no clear peak — no dominant magnet.
* Filled circles **alternate colors** rapidly — both sides are getting hit — chop, easy to get stopped both ways.
* The peak line **shifts every candle** — no stable center forming yet.

***

### 8. Trading philosophy — DO NOT use classic TA

This is a **liquidity flow** indicator, not a classical candlestick / oscillator indicator. Bringing old-TA thinking here is exactly why many users **cannot extract edge** from it.

#### 8.1 DROP these concepts

| Classical concept                                             | Why drop it when using this indicator                                                                                         |
| ------------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| "Technical support / resistance"                              | Meaningless — price moves to **trapped positions**, not to "places it bounced before".                                        |
| "Trendlines / channels"                                       | Hand-drawn lines do not know the actual position book — the heatmap does.                                                     |
| "Reversal candle patterns" (hammer, shooting star, engulfing) | Patterns are **effects** of large flow — by the time you spot the pattern, the wave is half-finished.                         |
| "RSI overbought / oversold"                                   | Markets can stay "overbought" for 3 days during a major short-liq sweep. RSI says sell, heat says fuel left → trust the heat. |
| "Wait for golden cross / MA confirmation"                     | MAs lag \~10–20 candles. By the time the MA confirms, the final filled circle has already printed.                            |
| "Wait for break and retest"                                   | A just-swept zone **does not retest reliably** — it is drained.                                                               |
| "Draw Fib from high to low"                                   | Fibonacci does not know where the liquidity reservoirs are.                                                                   |

#### 8.2 KEEP these mindsets

| Compatible mindset                                              | Why it fits                                                                          |
| --------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| **Price is a flow toward liquidity**                            | This is the only premise the Liquidation Heatmap rests on.                           |
| **Stop hunting is the primary mechanic of derivatives markets** | Filled circles are the proof.                                                        |
| **Swept liquidity is exhausted**                                | Core rule — do not expect retests.                                                   |
| **Ride the fuel flow, do not predict tops/bottoms**             | You do not need to know "where the top is" — you know "where the next reservoir is". |
| **Liquidity waves have distinct phases**                        | Phases 1–4 (§7.1) — reading the right phase is enough.                               |
| **Multi-confluence with order flow / footprint**                | Heat gives you the **map**; footprint gives you **execution confirmation**.          |

#### 8.3 The 3-question decision flow

Before any entry, ask 3 questions, **in this exact order**:

1. **Where is the largest unswept liquidity reservoir?** → Look at profile + peak line + brightest heat cluster.
2. **What phase are we in?** → Phase 1 (wait), 2 (prepare), 3 (ride), 4 (take profit). See §7.
3. **Has any new filled circle just changed the picture?** → If yes, **reassess from question 1**.

Do not ask: "What is the RSI? Has the MA crossed? What candle pattern is this?" Those questions are **outside the framework** of this indicator.

***

### 9. Sample trade setups

#### Setup 1 — Ride the short-liq sweep (Long)

**Context:** a **bright yellow** dense band of heat above price has formed over several hours and is **still unswept**. The profile shows one very long red bar at that exact zone. The peak line is above price.

**Entry conditions:**

* [ ] The bright cluster is **continuous, not broken** from a few hours back to now.
* [ ] Below price, heat is **clearly dimmer** (the market is leaning).
* [ ] A **▲ BUY** signal appeared in the last 1–3 candles, **OR** an orange filled circle (long liq sweep) just appeared right below price (confirmation of a short-term floor).
* [ ] Currently in **Phase 2 → Phase 3** of the liquidity wave.

**Execution:**

* Entry: market after the trigger candle closes, or a limit order at the next small heat zone below.
* SL: just below the trigger candle's low, **OR** below the recent orange filled circle — whichever is wider but not excessively far.
* TP1: 50% of the position at the **lower edge** of the bright heat cluster.
* TP2: remainder at the **peak line** or the top of the long red profile bar.
* Trailing: move SL up after each new blue circle (short liq sweep) appears while you ride.

**Exit early if:**

* A **very large** blue circle appears alone → the wave just swept the entire cluster, fuel is gone.
* Heat below price **starts building** → an opposite reservoir is forming.

***

#### Setup 2 — Ride the long-liq sweep (Short)

**Context:** mirror image of Setup 1, with the bright dense heat **below** price. The profile has a long green bar below. The peak line is below price.

**Entry conditions:**

* [ ] The bright cluster below is **still unswept**.
* [ ] Heat above price is clearly thinner.
* [ ] A **▼ SELL** signal in the last 1–3 candles, **OR** a blue filled circle (short liq sweep) just appeared right above price.
* [ ] Currently in Phase 2 → Phase 3.

**Execution:** mirror Setup 1 but in the opposite direction.

* Final TP: peak line or the top of the long green profile bar.
* SL: above the trigger candle's high or above the nearest blue circle.

***

#### Setup 3 — Enter after the "final shot" (short-term reversal)

**Context:** a **single very large** filled circle just appeared after a long move. Heat on the just-swept side is **empty**. Heat on the opposite side is starting to brighten.

**Entry conditions:**

* [ ] The filled circle is the largest of the session, or in the top 3.
* [ ] The candle containing the circle has a **very long wick** in the sweep direction, closing back the other way.
* [ ] Heat in the reversal direction **already has a cluster** waiting.
* [ ] Transitioning from Phase 3 → Phase 4.

**Execution:**

* Entry: after the candle closes, take direction matching the close.
* SL: outside the high / low of the wick on the candle containing the circle.
* TP1: 50% at the first heat cluster in the reversal direction.
* TP2: at the current peak line.

**Note:** this is a **short-term counter-trend** setup, not a major reversal. Set short targets, do not get greedy.

***

#### Setup 4 — Run between two clusters

**Context:** price is sitting **between** two heat clusters — one above, one below. The cluster in the trend's direction is **clearly larger**.

**Entry conditions:**

* [ ] Profile: the reservoir in the trend direction is at least \~2× the reservoir against.
* [ ] The peak line is on the same side as the trend direction (price will travel to it).
* [ ] Currently in Phase 1 → Phase 2 (the wave has not yet run hard).

**Execution:**

* Entry: when price pulls back lightly into the smaller cluster (acting as a "compressed spring") — do not wait for an arrow signal.
* SL: beyond the smaller cluster.
* TP: the larger cluster / the peak line.

**This setup is especially good when:** a small filled circle just appeared on the smaller-cluster side → confirms stops on that side were just cleared → price has "open road" to run.

***

#### Setup 5 — Stand aside (also a decision)

**Context:** any of the following:

* Heat is **balanced on both sides** of price.
* The peak line **shifts every candle**.
* Filled circles **alternate colors** continuously.
* Profile is **flat**, no bar stands out.

**Action:** **do not enter**. Wait for structure to reform.

> In liquidity-flow trading, **sitting out when the market has no clear magnet** is the largest single source of edge. Every entry in a noisy zone is a trade where your **opponent is the maker / market maker**, not the trapped retail trader.

***

### 10. Settings reference — every control explained

<figure><img src="/files/bzAX42oqZFQcrISzhREZ" alt=""><figcaption></figcaption></figure>

Open the indicator's settings dialog to adjust these controls.

#### Intensity (display intensity)

A **dual-handle slider** (min–max) that filters heat trails by intensity:

* **Left handle (min)** → drag right to hide weak trails (only show the noteworthy zones). Use when the chart is "drowning in color".
* **Right handle (max)** → drag left to lower the "bright yellow" threshold (more trails reach the bright color). Use when you need the medium-tier trails to pop out.

| Situation                         | Recommendation                 |
| --------------------------------- | ------------------------------ |
| Chart too cluttered to read       | Drag min up to \~25–35%.       |
| Chart too faint, hard to see heat | Drag max down to \~70–80%.     |
| Standard reading                  | Min \~15%, Max 100% (default). |

> **Tip:** the number next to the slider shows the threshold in terms of estimated position size (K / M / B), not %. Use it to pin an absolute floor — e.g. "only show trails ≥ 5M USD".

#### Cell H (cell height)

Slider for the **vertical thickness** of each heat cell on the chart. Range from **x0.5** to **x50.0**.

| Level     | When to use                                                                     |
| --------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| x0.5 – x2 | When trading on **scalp / tick chart**, you need fine resolution.               |
| x5 – x20  | Default — fits intraday swing.                                                  |
| x25 – x50 | When viewing **HTF** (4H / 1D), you want clusters to merge into clear "blocks". |

Adjusting Cell H **does not change the data** — only the presentation. If the chart looks "empty" after a change, drag Cell H up until the trails connect.

#### Filled (swept-zone circle density)

Slider that filters how many filled circles show. Labels:

| Label | Meaning                       |
| ----- | ----------------------------- |
| Many  | Show even small sweeps.       |
| Med   | Balanced.                     |
| Few   | Keep only significant sweeps. |
| Min   | Only very large sweeps.       |

Drag **left** → more circles. Drag **right** → fewer circles.

#### Profile (toggle)

Turn the **right-edge horizontal bar strip** and the dashed peak line on / off.

* **On** (default): always see the total liquidity reservoir and the primary magnet.
* **Off**: use when the chart is already crowded by other indicators (right-side DOM ladder, OB Heatmap, etc.).

#### Signals (toggle)

Turn the **▲ BUY / ▼ SELL arrows** on the chart on / off.

* **On** (default): trigger signals appear automatically.
* **Off**: use when you want to read the raw map without hints. Advanced traders often turn this off after gaining proficiency — they read the heat structure themselves.

> **Note for advanced traders:** the arrows are an **assistant**, not a trade order. If you have mastered Phases 1–4, the arrow is just additional confirmation — you do not have to wait for it.

***

### 11. Tips and common mistakes

#### 11.1 Tips

**Read heat from far before close** Zoom out first to see the **big picture** (where the largest cluster is, which side price is leaning toward). Then zoom in to pick the exact entry. Do not do the reverse.

**Profile + peak line are the first two things to check every morning** Open the chart, enable the indicator → look at the profile and peak line for **3 seconds** before looking at candles. You will know "where today's magnet is" before the current price action "tricks your gut".

**Filled circles are the "footprints of trapped crowds"** Each circle = a batch of people who just got liquidated. When a large circle appears exactly where your SL was just stopped → you were part of that crowd. When a large circle appears against your direction → you just got fuel from "the other side".

**Combine with Footprint chart, not with MA / RSI** Heat gives the map. Footprint confirms execution force at the level. These two are a **natural pair**. Do not "stuff in" classical indicators — they only create indecision.

**Multi-timeframe: a large HTF cluster always beats a small LTF cluster** If the 4H has a bright yellow cluster above price, and the 5m has a small cluster below pointing the other way → **4H wins**. Do not short the 5m when the 4H still has fuel to push long.

**Adjust Cell H to your trading timeframe, not as a fixed value** Scalp 1m → low Cell H. Swing 1H → high Cell H. One Cell H value does not fit every timeframe.

#### 11.2 Common mistakes

**Mistake 1 — Treating bright heat as "resistance"** Bright heat **does not block price**. Bright heat is the **target**. Shorting just below a bright heat cluster above = fighting the map.

**Mistake 2 — Expecting price to retest a recently filled zone** A just-swept zone is drained. Price **will not return to test it**, or if it does, **will not hold**. Do not place limits at recently filled zones.

**Mistake 3 — Entering while the peak line is still drifting** A jumping peak = the liquidity has not yet settled. Wait for the peak to stabilize for at least 5–10 candles before trusting it as a target.

**Mistake 4 — Treating BUY/SELL arrows as immediate-entry signals** The arrow says "the reservoir is loaded in this direction". You must **confirm with the next candle** before entering.

**Mistake 5 — Reading absolute brightness instead of relative** A trail that "looks bright" zoomed out can be dim when zoomed in. Brightness is meaningful **only relative to other trails in the same view**.

**Mistake 6 — Running classical TA in parallel** "Heat says long, RSI says overbought, I'll wait for RSI to cool down then long" → by the time RSI cools down, the heat wave has already finished. Heat and classical TA live in two different mental frameworks — pick one, do not mix.

**Mistake 7 — Enabling too many indicators at once** Heatmap + OB Heatmap + Footprint + 4 oscillators → eye-soup, poor decisions. Effective minimum: **Liquidation Heatmap + Footprint** (or OB Heatmap instead of Footprint if you trade DOM).

**Mistake 8 — Standing aside for too short when structure is noisy** When the peak jumps and filled circles alternate → wait for **hours**, not minutes. The market needs time to rebuild a fresh liquidity reservoir.

***

### 12. Glossary

| Term                             | Definition                                                                                                                        |
| -------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Heat trail (heat segment)**    | A colored band on the chart representing a zone with trapped leveraged positions. Brighter = more positions.                      |
| **Heat cluster**                 | A group of adjacent trails forming a bright "block" — a magnet zone.                                                              |
| **Profile**                      | The horizontal bar strip on the right edge of the chart, summarizing the live liquidity reservoir at each price band.             |
| **Peak line**                    | A dashed horizontal line marking the price zone with the densest current liquidity. It is a **target**, not a resistance.         |
| **Filled circle**                | A circle marking a zone where liquidity was just cleared. Orange = swept long liq, blue = swept short liq.                        |
| **BUY/SELL signal**              | An arrow alert: the liquidity reservoir on that side is large enough and momentum is leaning correctly for price to travel there. |
| **Liquidity wave**               | The process of price traveling from one cluster to another, leaving filled circles behind. Has 4 phases (§7.1).                   |
| **Accumulation phase (Phase 1)** | Heat thickens on one side, price has not yet run. Observe.                                                                        |
| **Imbalance phase (Phase 2)**    | One side becomes clearly heavier, the other thins. Prepare entry plan.                                                            |
| **Running phase (Phase 3)**      | Price accelerates, same-side filled circles in sequence. Ride.                                                                    |
| **Empty phase (Phase 4)**        | Heat on the just-swept side is empty, the opposite side starts building. Take profit / reverse.                                   |
| **Final shot**                   | A single very large filled circle, alone, after a long move. Marks the end of a short-term wave.                                  |
| **Stop hunt**                    | The action of price sweeping clean stop / liquidation clusters. This is a normal mechanic, not a "conspiracy".                    |

***


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