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  • Bacterial Infections Involved in Certain Pediatric Psoriasis Subtypes, Study Suggests

    Bacterial Infections Involved in Certain Pediatric Psoriasis Subtypes, Study Suggests

    Esteban Fernandez Faith, MD

    Credit: Nationwide Children’s Hospital

    New research is shedding light on the link between bacterial infections and psoriasis in pediatric patients, especially those with guttate or inverse psoriasis.1

    Findings from the multicenter retrospective study suggest pediatric patients with guttate or inverse psoriasis may warrant evaluation for pharyngeal or anogenital bacterial infections—even if asymptomatic. Additionally, while bacteria like Streptococcus and Staphylococcus aureus were commonly isolated, treating the infection did not significantly alter psoriasis outcomes.1

    A chronic, multisystem, inflammatory disease, psoriasis affects approximately 1% of children, with onset most common during adolescence. Although skin involvement often drives patients to seek medical care, recognizing the condition as a potentially multisystem disorder in the context of a complex interplay between genetic and environmental factors is crucial for optimizing disease management.2

    “Guttate psoriasis onset and plaque psoriasis flares are associated with streptococcal pharyngitis,” Esteban Fernandez Faith, MD, a pediatric dermatologist, program director of the pediatric dermatology Fellowship at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, and an associate professor of pediatrics and dermatology at the Ohio State University College of Medicine and colleagues wrote.1 “Literature regarding the relationship between anogenital bacterial dermatitis and psoriasis in pediatric patients is limited.”

    To address this gap in research, investigators conducted a multicenter retrospective study of patients ≤ 18 years of age seen at tertiary referral centers in the United States and Canada with an initial clinical encounter date between January 2011, and January 2021. For inclusion, patients were required to have a diagnosis of psoriasis or psoriasiform dermatitis identified by ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes and a microbiological test obtained to evaluate for a pharyngeal or anogenital infection.1

    A total of 166 unique patients with psoriasis/psoriasiform dermatitis and suspected pharyngeal and/or anogenital infection met the inclusion criteria. The average age at initial evaluation was 9.2 ± 4.3 years with a slight female predominance (55%). The majority (66%) of subjects were White.1

    Plaque psoriasis was observed in 49% of patients. Other subtypes of psoriasis seen in this population included guttate (36%), inverse (16%), pustular (4%), nail (4%), and erythrodermic (2%) psoriasis.1

    Investigators noted 57% of patients had ≥ 1 positive culture. In total, 35 patients (21%) had a positive pharyngeal culture only, 53 (32%) had a positive anogenital culture only, and 6 patients (4%) had both positive cultures.1

    Of the 59 patients with any positive anogenital culture, 53% grew Staphylococcus aureus, of which 77% were methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus, and 23% were methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Additionally, 41% of positive anogenital cultures grew Streptococcus species.1

    Investigators pointed out inverse psoriasis was significantly more common in patients with a positive anogenital culture than in those with a positive pharyngeal culture (adjusted P = .0356) or a negative pharyngeal and/or anogenital culture (adjusted P = .0356). They also noted guttate psoriasis was significantly more common in patients with a positive pharyngeal culture than in patients with a positive anogenital culture (adjusted P <.0001) or patients with a negative pharyngeal and/or anogenital culture (adjusted P = .0037).1

    Of note, treatment of a positive bacterial culture did not correlate with the treatment response of psoriasis/psoriasiform dermatitis.1

    “Pharyngeal and anogenital bacterial infections may be identified in pediatric patients with psoriasis, especially those with guttate and inverse psoriasis, respectively. Staphylococcus and Streptococcus are commonly identified pathogens in the anogenital areas of pediatric patients with psoriasis,” investigators concluded.1 “The multicenter design of this study has allowed us to gather and share important knowledge on the largest cohort of patients with an anogenital infection associated with psoriasis to date. Future prospective studies can further clarify the effect of treating a positive anogenital bacterial culture on psoriasis outcomes.”

    References
    1. Ravi M, Cordoro KM, Holland KE, et al. The Association of Psoriasis and Bacterial Infections in Pediatric Patients: A Retrospective Review. Pediatric Dermatology. https://doi.org/10.1111/pde.16007
    2. Menter A, Cordoro KM, Davis DMR, et al. Joint American Academy of Dermatology–National Psoriasis Foundation guidelines of care for the management and treatment of psoriasis in pediatric patients. JAAD. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2019.08.049

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  • Initial VLT/MUSE Spectroscopy Of The Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS – astrobiology.com

    1. Initial VLT/MUSE Spectroscopy Of The Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS  astrobiology.com
    2. Rare find: interstellar visitor seen blazing through our Solar System  Nature
    3. The new interstellar object A11pl3Z, now 3I/ATLAS: online observation – 3 July 2025  The Virtual Telescope Project 2.0
    4. NASA Discovers Interstellar Comet Moving Through Solar System  NASA Science (.gov)
    5. Rendezvous with 3I/ATLAS  Avi Loeb – Medium

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  • Anisimova tops Pavlyuchenkova to make first Wimbledon semifinal

    Anisimova tops Pavlyuchenkova to make first Wimbledon semifinal

    WIMBLEDON — Six years ago, before Coco Gauff and Mirra Andreeva crashed into our collective consciousness, Amanda Anisimova was a teenage phenomenon. At the age of 17, she stunned Aryna Sabalenka and Simona Halep on the way to the semifinals at 2019 Roland Garros.

    Wimbledon: Scores Order of play | Draws

    It happened again three years later when she reached the quarterfinals here at the All England Club. But later that summer the pressures of professional tennis began to overwhelm the developing player. Over the next nine months, she managed only four victories, failing to win back-to-back matches in 10 consecutive tournaments.

    Anisimova stepped away from the sport for seven months to heal and rebuild her mental health. When she returned to begin the 2024 season, her ranking was No. 442.

    In retrospect, that extended break turned out to be a terrific decision. Eighteen months later, Anisimova — still only 23 and destined to enter the Top 10 next week — is playing the best tennis of her young life.

    On a sunny late Tuesday afternoon on No. 1 Court, No. 13 seed Anisimova advanced to the Wimbledon semifinals with a 6-1, 7-6 (9) victory over Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. That matches her career-best major berth of six years ago and represents her furthest advancement here.

    She’ll have a chance to make some personal history on Thursday when she meets Sabalenka, the World No. 1. Earlier, Sabalenka was a 4-6, 6-2, 6-4 comeback winner over Laura Siegemund. Anisimova has won five of her eight previous matches against Sabalenka.

    Anisimova established herself in only three minutes at the beginning of Tuesday’s quarterfinal, breaking Pavlyuchenkova’s serve with a rocket of a forehand. That trend held up with Anisimova winning six of seven games in less than a half hour. She has now won 28 consecutive matches this year when she’s won the first set.

    The 34-year-old Pavlyuchenkova had serving issues throughout the first set, hitting three double faults and going 0-for-6 behind her second serve.

    In the second set, Anisimova broke Pavlyuchenkova in the sixth game to lead 4-2. But serving for the match at 5-3, the American was broken for the first time when Pavlyuchenkova converted her third break point.

    Pavlyuchenkova saved two match points to level the match at 5-5, then came back from 0-30 down at 6-5 to force the tiebreak. The breaker was a barnburner, with Anisimova saving four set points before she converted her second match point of the tiebreak (and fourth overall) with a serve Pavlyuchenkova could not return.

    Anisimova finished with 26 winners, 17 more than Pavlyuchenkova. She’s now won all four of her matches against Pavlyuchenkova and is 11-2 on grass for the season, another career best.

    More to come…

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  • The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission.

    Table of Contents

    Welcome to the 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards, our first-ever list of the most impressive gaming hardware and software that we’ve seen over the past year, including high-end and portable platforms, streaming gear, and of course, games.

    As gaming expands its reach to include billions of players across the globe, it’s clearer than ever that there’s a way to play for everyone’s particular tastes. For some, it’s experiencing gorgeous, cinematic experiences in full 4K on a wall-size screen. For others, it’s gathering friends around the tabletop for epic role play with stat sheets in hand. Gaming is also an avenue for creators to express themselves and build their own streaming legacies and following online.

    For the inaugural edition of the awards, we wanted to focus on the essentials — meeting people where they game, how they do it, and with what they want to play. Whether it’s in pursuit of the highest pixel count or just finding comfort in hours-long marathon sessions, these are the products that exceeded our expectations and changed the way we play every day.



    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards

    After months of testing the newest hardware and software, these are the award winners that stuck with us well after gameplay ended.

    Best Home Console

    With a much more powerful GPU than the base model, the PS5 Pro improves the visual fidelity of just about every PS5 game (and many PS4 games) with smoother frame rates and better graphical performance, even in games that necessitated a choice between Quality and Performance mode. Games that previously couldn’t hit 4K resolution can now be upscaled via AI enhancement with PlayStation Spectral Super Resolution (PSSR), and the optimized performance allows more games to reach 120Hz on compatible displays via an HDMI 2.1 connection.

    The PS5 Pro is the most powerful home console available, serving as a more affordable, one-stop shop alternative to high-end PCs, while also having one of the largest game libraries. PlayStation exclusives like Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 are built to run at their best on the Pro, but even Xbox titles like Forza Horizon 5 perform better in benchmark tests on the PS5 Pro than they do on the Xbox Series X. —Chris Cruz

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Handheld Console

    For years, Nintendo has been behind the competition in terms of horsepower, but its latest device, Switch 2, catches the company up to modern technological standards without sacrificing the hybrid home and handheld design that made its predecessor a smash hit. It features a massive 7.9-inch LCD screen (up from the original’s 6.2) that’s capable of 1080p resolution, HDR10, and VRR (Variable Refresh Rate) up to 120Hz — making games run with a dynamic color range and smoothness comparable to home displays. When docked, the resolution can be bumped to a full 4K.

    Design-wise, Switch 2 feels exponentially more premium than any Nintendo product before, with a clean matte-black finish, both top and bottom USB-C ports, and a larger, studier build that will please adults who struggle with prolonged use of handhelds. Utilizing GameChat, players can connect via audio or video (using the Nintendo Switch 2 camera peripheral), and even play across multiple Switch devices using a single copy of a game with GameShare. With a huge library of backward-compatible games, it also upgrades many older generation titles to run better than ever without any downloadable updates required. — C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Handheld PC

    The ASUS ROG Ally X is a powerful portable gaming PC that runs Windows 11 and accesses popular gaming apps, such as Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, Nvidia GeForce Now, Steam, Battle.net, and PlayStation Remote Play. The gaming device offers speedy and powerful performance with its built-in AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme processor, a sharp seven-inch touchscreen display with Full HD 1080p resolution and a refresh rate of up to 120Hz for silky-smooth gameplay, a long battery life of up to five hours per charge, and an impressive 1TB of on-board storage for more games and apps. The ASUS ROG Ally X is the height of handheld gaming. Rudie Obias

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming Desktop

    The MSI Aegis R2 is a gaming beast. This gaming desktop PC is equipped with the powerful Intel Core i9-14900F processor and high-end NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070Ti graphics card for speedy gaming, with 32GB of memory and 2TB of on-board storage for dozens of big games. Everything comes inside of a sleek, stylish, and transparent housing with sophisticated airflow designed throughout the unit with RGB lighting to add a gamer’s touch. MSI’s gaming desktop will make short work out of just about any demanding PC game you throw at it. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Home Arcade Cabinet

    While every modern gaming platform houses a variety of classic throwback titles to download and enjoy on the couch, there’s nothing quite like having a fully immersive arcade experience at home. Arcade1Up’s line of retro game re-creations brings coin-op gaming home with tons of quality-of-life features like WiFi-enabled online leaderboards and multiplayer for select titles.

    The cabinets house vibrant flat-screen displays and dual-speaker audio for robust sound, yet easy to assemble — standing at five or more feet, giving a full-bodied arcade façade, unlike most replicas which downsize the casing and screen. With more than a dozen models designed for games like NBA Jam, Mortal Kombat II, and even Time Crisis, each Arcade1Up machine has custom inputs ranging from joystick and buttons to pistols with mechanical slide action. Most also include multiple games loaded into the machine, ready to play. Our personal favorite? The Mortal Kombat II cabinet, which include 14 classic games like the original Mortal Kombat trilogy, Rampage, and Gauntlet, to name a few. — C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming Laptop

    Armed with the mighty AMD Ryzen AI 9 processor and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 GPU, the Razer Blade 16 is a gaming workhorse that is the company’s thinnest gaming laptop. The Razer Blade 16 has a 16-inch OLED display with QHD+ resolution and a refresh rate of up to 240Hz for buttery-smooth motion for seamless action. This is the ultimate portable gaming machine. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming Monitor

    Not all monitors are made equal, so the MSI MPG 321URX 4K Ultra HD Gaming Monitor is a standout — thanks to its impressive QD-OLED display, vibrant color pallet, perfect black levels, and super smooth refresh rate of up to 240Hz. The monitor features variable refresh rate (VVR) to match the video output of just about any game you’re playing, while input lag is not an issue with instant responsiveness for better play. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming Headset (Wireless)

    The SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless Headset is a serious gaming headset with premium audio quality that’s crisp, clear, and rich. And with 360-degree spatial audio and noise-cancellation settings, the headset gives you an overall immersive experience when playing your favorite games. It’s a pro-level headset with the ability to sync to a PC and a gaming console — like the Xbox Series X/S or Sony PlayStation 5 — at the same time, thanks to its included base station. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best VR Headset

    The Meta Quest 3S is a mixed-reality headset that doesn’t need a separate computer, laptop, or even gaming console to play the latest and greatest video games. You just need a strong WiFi connection, a Meta account, and an Xbox Wireless Controller with a membership to Xbox Game Pass Ultimate for Microsoft’s massive cloud gaming library.

    The service features popular titles, such as Starfield, Hi-Fi Rush, Death Loop, Forza Motorsport, South of Midnight, EA Sports FC 25, Madden NFL 25, and more, that could be played on the headset’s immersive “floating” display for sharp, crisp, and clear gaming. Now you can play in your own world. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming TV

    The Sony BRAVIA 8 II 4K Ultra HD Google TV is best in class among other gaming TVs. It features Sony’s QD-OLED display technology to go from bright to dark at a moment’s notice, while the company’s BRAVIA picture settings enhance vivid colors and deep black levels for playing video games. The 4K TV has ideal gaming features like variable refresh rate (VVR) to match whatever is being displayed on the TV, while its 4K Ultra HD 120Hz refresh rate makes gaming silky smooth and clear with low input lag for responsive gameplay. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming Earbuds

    The SteelSeries Arctis GameBuds are a great all-in-one solution for gaming on the go, and they’re masterfully executed with clear and rich audio that feels immersive and full.

    These earbuds come with noise-cancelation settings to block out the world around you, while 360-degree audio makes it feel like you’re in the middle of the action. One of the best things about them is they come with more than 100 presets for a wide range of popular games, including Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, Apex Legends, Fortnite, Minecraft, and more.

    Equipped with up to 10 hours per charge — up to 40 hours with their included wireless charging case — these wireless gaming earbuds are a great pair of accessories for your portable gaming console or your smartphone. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming Chair

    While the average player may not associate Herman Miller with gaming, the company best known for its luxury office furniture and Eames chairs has been quietly making its mark with its line of products that blend tastefully subdued design with ergonomic support suited for esports marathons. Its flagship, the Logitech G Embody Gaming Chair, is an updated version of the popular Embody model that has been tweaked to accommodate a player’s needs.

    With an enhanced seat whose extra layer of foam promotes better, more active posture, and copper-infused cooling foam that reduces heat and sweaty thighs, the Embody Gaming Chair is both sturdy and comfortable for hours-long use in a high-stress environment. But its greatest boon is its elegant design, which comes in multiple color schemes and accents, and looks much less busy than most pro-level gaming chairs. It’s a chair that works great while streaming but also looks more like it belongs in an adult home. Less eyesore, more casual comfort. —C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Mobile Gaming Adapter

    The best way to turn your smartphone into a portable gaming console is with the Backbone Pro. Just slide and connect your Apple iPhone or Android smartphone into the Backbone Pro via USB-C to get instant controls for Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, PS Remote Play, Steam Link, or hundreds of mobile apps and games, like Call of Duty: Mobile, Roblox, Minecraft, and others. It’s a comfortable and more precise way to play your favorite video games when you’re out and about in town. It has up to 40 hours of gameplay per charge, which sets the bar for mobile gaming controllers. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming Keyboard

    For precision, accuracy, and the most impressive design, look no further than the ASUS ROG Strix Scope II 96 Wireless Keyboard. It features a compact and efficient key- and number-pad layout with clicky textures, smooth keystrokes, and stable travel for high-level PC gaming. The gaming keyboard has preprogrammed hotkeys for easier and faster access to settings and apps, as well as swapped switches and RGB lighting for customizable experiences. It’s wireless with up to a whopping 1,500 hours per charge for longer gaming sessions without a top-off. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming Mouse

    The Razer Basilisk V3 Pro Wireless Gaming Mouse is made for precision gaming and personalization alike. It features speediness, responsiveness, comfort, and versatility when playing all sorts of PC games, especially first-person shooters. It’s highly customizable with mappable buttons at the top, three left thumb buttons on the side, two buttons under the scroll wheel. In fact, the scroll wheel is even customizable to go from step or free spinning at a moment’s notice. Although it’s completely wireless, it doesn’t suffer from input lag or stuttering. No lag here — just smooth scrolling. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Gaming Mic

    The Blue Yeti USB Microphone is the gold standard of gaming microphones, featuring multidirectional audio for game livestreams or podcast recordings. Audio is clear, rich, and deep, while giving your voice a professional-level texture and feel. The microphone is “plug and play” for both Mac and PC desktops and laptops.
    It’s available in three colors: blackout, midnight blue, and silver. Let’s face it — this thing also looks really, really cool as part of a gaming setup. —R.O.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Pro Controller

    8BitDo has made a name for itself with its eclectic and colorful array of third-party controllers built for everything from PC and console to mobile phones, but its flagship pro controller, 8Bitdo Ultimate 2, is easily the best one the company’s made yet. With a textured grip and lightweight construction, the Ultimate 2 feels great to hold, easily besting the base controllers for this generation’s consoles, but with multiple added benefits.

    Its magnet-based Hall Effect triggers are incredibly precise and can be toggled between full-extension (for things like measuring acceleration while driving) or hair-trigger (for instantaneous snapping in a shooter), but it’s the TMR (Tunneling Magnetoresistance) joysticks that are the star. An upgrade from the already coveted Hall Effect, TMR is the top-tier in analog-stick design, with absolute precision in movement and aiming without the risk of a standard controller’s wear and drift. Pairable via Bluetooth, Wireless 2.4G dongle, or just a USC-C wire, it’s an extremely versatile and must-have controller for PC and Nintendo Switch (or Switch 2). —C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Retro Controller

    For players looking to relive the glory days of retro gaming, the 8BitDo Pro 2 provides a nostalgic facsimile of old controllers with modern upgrades to comfort. An upgrade from the SNES-inspired SN30 Pro, the Pro 2 features everything that made that gamepad great — classic button layout and Hall Effect joysticks — with more formfitting ergonomic grips that will be a godsend for anyone whose hands easily cramp around blockier controllers. The result is a pad that looks like a blend between the iconic SNES controller and PlayStation’s DualShock.

    Being a Pro controller, it also offers fully extendable rear triggers and deep customization options using 8BitDo Ultimate Software, with the ability to swap between different inputs on the fly to accommodate Nintendo Switch and Switch 2, Android, and PC with ease. —C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Fight Stick

    For fighting game enthusiasts, a reliable fight stick is paramount; too light or chintzy and the rapid inputs and twists will make the pad slide or flop. The Victrix Pro FS Arcade Fight Stick counters this with a solid, sturdy base that feels light in the lap but grips to surfaces, planted firmly in place even when the combat heats up.

    Utilizing best-in-class Sanwa Denshi parts for both its joystick gate and buttons, movement is incredibly precise, making special moves and combos effortless with frame-perfect perfection. Its case is made from aircraft-grade aluminum, making slippage from a plastic surface a non-issue, and handles on both sides make gripping and carrying the pad a breeze. For more elite-level players, the FS 12 variant features a leverless design (no joystick at all; buttons only), which has become an increasingly popular way to compete in esports circles. — C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best PlayStation 5 Game

    When it comes to singleplayer, narratively driven games, PlayStation remains king with its first-party releases like God of War and The Last of Us. But Death Stranding 2: On the Beach is something else entirely — an immersive fusion of cinematic storytelling, walking simulator, and gonzo political art piece that only visionary developer Hideo Kojima could create.

    Set 11 months after the original 2019 game, the sequel once again follows Sam Porter Bridges (Norman Reedus) and a supporting cast played by A-listers like Léa Seydoux, Elle Fanning, and the ubiquitous Troy Baker for futuristic cautionary tale about the dangers of technology, ultra-nationalism, and humanity’s ever-growing disconnect from each other. Running on a PS5 Pro, it’s one of the most visually arresting games ever made, and its dense plot and open world gameplay will demand unraveling over the course of dozens of hours. Aside from its PlayStation-exclusive predecessor, there’s nothing else like Death Stranding 2 anywhere else in gaming. — C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Xbox Game

    Although many of its biggest hits have come from beloved franchises like Call of Duty, Microsoft’s internal publishing wing Xbox Games Studios has been on fire recently with some of the best games of the year. Among them, Compulsion Games’ South of Midnight shines as one of the most beautifully crafted single-player games in recent memory.

    The game is a Gothic fantasy set in the Deep South, and stars a woman named Hazel on a journey to restore her home after a cataclysmic hurricane wreaks havoc. Incorporating Southern folklore with magical abilities and mythical creatures, the story of South of Midnight plays as a dark fairy tale rooted in Black culture that’s brought to life in an incredible stop-motion-like aesthetic. Emotionally gripping and engaging to play, it’s one of the year’s best games and a crown jewel for Xbox-exclusive titles. — C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best PC Game

    Fans of Dune have longed for a game that can match the complexity of the franchise’s novels and recent Oscar-nominated blockbuster films — and it finally arrives with Dune: Awakening. The MMO survival game is a sprawling player choice-driven epic set in an alternate timeline where Paul Atreides was never born or risen to power, leaving Arrakis in a very different kind of civil war.

    Players take on the role of a custom-created character, forced to endure the brutal surface of Arrakis, scavenging for precious water and resources amid its sandscapes. To survive, crafting and resource management become essential in order to build increasingly complex shelters and strongholds — all the while outwitting threats ranging from massive sandworms and other players in PvP combat. The game may exist outside of canon, but still provides a fascinatingly immersive experience of what it actually feels like to live in the fictional universe created by Frank Herbert. — C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best VR Game

    After multiple botched attempts, IO Interactive has finally nailed the experience of Hitman in VR with this year’s PS VR2-exclusive World of Assassination trilogy. Rather than being a diluted version of the base game, the new vision for Hitman VR comes in the form of an update to the existing PS5 release that swaps (almost) every level of the core game into virtual reality.

    Hitman World of Assassination is already one of (if not the) best series of stealth games ever made, and translating the sneaking, subterfuge, and silent executions of IO’s modern classic feels like a perfect fit. Traversing each level feels intuitive without forced teleportation gimmicks employed by other VR titles, and being able to ambidextrously manage tasks (say: holding someone in a headlock while aiming a pistol) makes the more passive action of the flat-screen game exponentially more immersive in VR. The game is also one of the best-looking VR games available, thanks to the (unfortunately wired) PS VR2 tech, which is connected to and powered by the PS5 (or preferably PS5 Pro). — C.C.

    The 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Awards: Best Consoles, Games, Accessories

    Best Nintendo Switch 2 Game

    The only first-party launch title for the Nintendo Switch 2 lives up to the hype and is the main driver on why you should get the new gaming console to begin with. With major gameplay and graphics upgrades, new modes, and new characters and karts, Mario Kart World is a worthy addition to the franchise. It feels familiar enough to not get overwhelmed, while introducing new mechanics and strategies to keep the game fresh and exciting, as it has you coming back for more. — R.O.



    How We Chose the 2025 Rolling Stone Gaming Award Winners

    For Rolling Stone’s first-ever Gaming Awards, our team of writers and editors researched products recently released — some are brand new; others are modern but still reign supreme in their class. To determine the categories and the products tested, we looked at the big picture of what it means to be a gamer, and what gamers want and need.

    First, there’s the platforms to game on, from consoles, PCs, and portables to more specialized hardware that evokes a retro nostalgia. We also considered what players are using games for — in the era of streaming, content creation and gameplay go hand-in-hand. And, of course, there are the games themselves, which serve as the foundation for it all.

    For the 2025 Gaming Awards, Rolling Stone staff and expert contributors worked together to identify which products should be recognized as essential for every gamer’s individual needs, based on hours of dedicated testing and personal use throughout the year.

    We ran every console and device through its paces, testing different versions of multi-platform games and exclusives alike as part of our rigorous review process. We set up after-hours gaming sessions to pass around controllers and compete in our own newsroom arcade. And we captured and created content that’s been part of our own editorial coverage utilizing tech that’s available to consumers and professionals alike. These are products that we equally trust are the best tools to do our jobs and enjoy in the comfort of our homes.

    After testing and deliberation, our team chose the winners based on their innovative and reliable quality-of-life features, their balance of ease of use and high-end quality, and frankly, whether they’re fun to use. After all, what good is being the best in gaming without enjoying yourself along the way?

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  • Halo Infinite: S&D Extraction (Seek and Deploy) | Halo

    Halo Infinite: S&D Extraction (Seek and Deploy) | Halo

    The time has come – S&D Extraction arrives TODAY in Halo Infinite and we’re going to breakdown what you can expect. Let’s jump right in.

    For the uninitiated, S&D Extraction (Seek and Deploy) is an all-new mode based on the classic tactical FPS genre.  

    • Sandbox: All of your movement capabilities, shield health, weapon damage / traits are all the same and what you would expect out of Halo Infinite.
    • Round based: The mode is a Best of 11 rounds, where the first to win 6 rounds will claim victory in the match.
    • Extraction: In other tactical games players carry a bomb – well, in S&D Extraction there is no bomb, and instead you go to either A or B sites to plant the Extraction device. This means that anyone can plant on Offense and you don’t need to worry about who carries the bomb. 
    • One sided: Each team will take turns on Offense and Defense. On Offense, your job is to plant the Extraction device and either eliminate everyone on Defense or successfully extract the device. On Defense, you have to stop the enemy team from planting either by wiping them out, stopping them from planting within the 90 second round, or “defusing” the Extraction device after it’s been planted. 
    • Economy: Based on individual and team performance, each player will earn points that they can spend next round.  The more kills, assists, and round wins you get – the more points you get. 
    • Custom Loadouts: While each player starts with Bandit Evo, you’ll have a chance at the beginning of each round to upgrade your loadout with the points you’ve earned including weapons, grenades, and equipment. Do you spend each round, or do you save your points for the big spend? Each round your items get reset, so only buy something if you know you’re going to use it. 
    • Buy Back: Players with enough points can buy back into a round after they’ve died to provide reinforcements to the team in times of need. It’s expensive though so decide wisely and once you buy back, you’ll just have your Bandit Evo and won’t be able to buy anything else.

    The entire mode was scripted in Forge, and Halo Studios hired none other than Artifice to make this design and vision come to life. Thank you, Artifice, for your hard work and masterful skill scripting in Forge.

    S&D Extraction will launch with two playlists:

    • Ranked 
    • Social /Unranked

    The Unranked playlist will be available for a limited time, and the Ranked playlist will become part of the monthly rotationals.

    The S&D Extraction playlists will launch with (6) total maps made exclusively for this mode.

    For the first map titled Hangar 18, Halo Studios hired Mikrips from the community to design and art this amazing map. Thank you Mikrips for your work on this map and for your close partnership in designing and fine tuning this map from beginning to end.  

    The remaining 5 maps were chosen from the finalists from the Forgehub S&D Extraction contest earlier this year. We want to thank the entire Forgehub staff for running this competition, and of course matching our prize pool contributions. And thank you to the over 50 Forgers that submitted their maps into the contest after working so hard to complete their maps in time for the tight deadline. Thank you!  

    HANGAR 18 by MikRips

    Hangar 18 by MikRips

    ABRASION by ExtraDot

    Abrasion by ExtraDot

    HOLLOWED by Zaddy Hammer

    HOLLOWED by Zaddy Hammer

    FRACTURE by SilencerEU, UnknownEmerald, KatRatATat, Squally DaBeanz

    FRACTURE by SilencerEU, UnknownEmerald, KatRatATat, Squally DaBeanz

    ELLIPSE by mysh0tisntsik

    ELLIPSE by mysh0tisntsik

    ASHORE by ADSR

    ASHORE by ADSR

    When we set out to make this mode, we wanted to make something new, competitive, and fun that Halo’s never had before. So while this won’t be featured on the mainstage in HCS, we hope that players have a blast and we can’t wait to see all the epic moments that come out of it! 

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  • SimonMed Imaging Launches Advanced AI Mammogram Services for Breast and Heart Health

    SimonMed Imaging Launches Advanced AI Mammogram Services for Breast and Heart Health

    July 7, 2025 — SimonMed Imaging, one of the largest outpatient medical imaging providers in the United States, has launched Mammogram+ and Mammogram+ Heart, two new AI-enhanced mammogram services aimed at improving early detection and advancing preventative care.

    Mammogram+ is SimonMed’s most advanced breast cancer screening to date. By combining two AI technologies with expert breast radiologist review, Mammogram+ is designed to spot cancer earlier and deliver more personalized insights on their breast density, lifetime risk. This service replaces the previous PBCD (Personalized Breast Cancer Detection) program. 

    “At SimonMed Imaging, we’re focused on empowering women with the latest technology to take charge of their health,” said Dr. John Simon, CEO and Founder of SimonMed Imaging. “Mammogram+ and Mammogram+ Heart combine advanced AI to detect breast cancer earlier and identify early signs of heart disease—offering valuable insight into both breast and heart health through a single exam.”

    Building on this new technology in breast health, Mammogram+ Heart enhances standard mammography by incorporating an AI-based assessment of Breast Arterial Calcification (BAC), an emerging clinical marker linked to cardiovascular risk in women. This dual-purpose screening enables detection of both breast cancer and early signs of heart disease in a single appointment.

    Mammogram+ and Mammogram+ Heart are now available at SimonMed locations nationwide that offer mammography services. These are optional add-ons that can be included with a standard screening mammogram. No referral is needed for patients to include either service as part of their regular mammogram.

    “Women deserve the best tools available when it comes to detecting disease early,” said Dr. Angela Fried, Director of Breast Imaging at SimonMed. “With Mammogram+ and Mammogram+ Heart, we’re offering more than a scan—we’re delivering deeper insight, earlier intervention, and more empowered care.” 

    This launch reflects SimonMed’s ongoing mission in AI-driven diagnostics, accessible innovation, and lifesaving screening tools designed around real patient needs. As breast cancer and cardiovascular disease diagnoses continue to rise, these newly added services aim to close the gap in early detection.

    Learn more at www.simonmed.com.


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  • Melting glaciers are awakening Earth’s most dangerous volcanoes

    Melting glaciers are awakening Earth’s most dangerous volcanoes

    Melting glaciers may be silently setting the stage for more explosive and frequent volcanic eruptions in the future, according to research on six volcanoes in the Chilean Andes.

    Presented today (July 8) at the Goldschmidt Conference in Prague, the study suggests that hundreds of dormant subglacial volcanoes worldwide – particularly in Antarctica – could become more active as climate change accelerates glacier retreat.

    The link between retreating glaciers and increased volcanic activity has been known in Iceland since the 1970s, but this is one of the first studies to explore the phenomenon in continental volcanic systems. The findings could help scientists better understand and predict volcanic activity in glacier-covered regions.

    Researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, used argon dating and crystal analysis across six volcanoes in southern Chile, including the now dormant Mocho-Choshuenco volcano, to investigate how the Patagonian Ice Sheet’s advance and retreat influenced past volcanic behaviour. The work is in collaboration with researchers from Lehigh University, University of California Los Angeles, and Dickinson College.

    By precisely dating previous eruptions and analysing crystals in erupted rocks, the team tracked how the weight and pressure of glacial ice alter the characteristics of magma underground.

    They found that during the peak of the last ice age (around 26,000-18,000 years ago), thick ice cover suppressed the volume of eruptions and allowed a large reservoir of silica-rich magma to accumulate 10-15 km below the surface.

    As the ice sheet melted rapidly at the end of the last ice age, the sudden loss of weight caused the crust to relax and gasses in the magma to expand. This buildup of pressure triggered explosive volcanic eruptions from the deep reservoir, causing the volcano to form.

    Pablo Moreno-Yaeger from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, is presenting the research at the Goldschmidt Conference. He said: “Glaciers tend to suppress the volume of eruptions from the volcanoes beneath them. But as glaciers retreat due to climate change, our findings suggest these volcanoes go on to erupt more frequently and more explosively. The key requirement for increased explosivity is initially having a very thick glacial coverage over a magma chamber, and the trigger point is when these glaciers start to retreat, releasing pressure – which is currently happening in places like Antarctica.

    “Our study suggests this phenomenon isn’t limited to Iceland, where increased volcanicity has been observed, but could also occur in Antarctica. Other continental regions, like parts of North America, New Zealand and Russia, also now warrant closer scientific attention.”

    While the volcanic response to glacial melting is almost instant in geological terms, the process of changes in the magma system is gradual and occurs over centuries, giving some time for monitoring and early warning.

    The researchers also note that increased volcanic activity could have global climate impacts. In the short term, eruptions release aerosol (tiny particles in gases) that can temporarily cool the planet. This was seen after the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines, which reduced global temperatures by approximately 0.5 degrees C. But with multiple eruptions, the effects reverse.

    “Over time the cumulative effect of multiple eruptions can contribute to long-term global warming because of a buildup of greenhouse gases,” said Moreno-Yaeger. “This creates a positive feedback loop, where melting glaciers trigger eruptions, and the eruptions in turn could contribute to further warming and melting.”

    The research was funded by the National Science Foundation as part of a grant led by Professor Brad Singer at UW-Madison, and is due to be published in a peer-reviewed journal later this year.

    The Goldschmidt Conference is the world’s foremost geochemistry conference. It is a joint congress of the European Association of Geochemistry and the Geochemical Society (US), and over 4000 delegates attend. It takes place in Prague, Czech Republic, from July 6-11 2025.

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  • Peter Jackson Wants to Bring Flightless Bird Moa Back From Extinction

    Peter Jackson Wants to Bring Flightless Bird Moa Back From Extinction

    Colossal Biosciences — which announced in April that it had brought dire wolves back from extinction (only to be met with a howl of critics who called the claims overstated) — is teaming up with filmmaker Peter Jackson on a new animal revival project.

    The company announced Tuesday that it is working with Jackson and New Zealand’s Ngāi Tahu Research Centre to bring back the moa, native flightless birds that went extinct around 600 years ago. Found nowhere else on Earth, moas comprised nine species — with the largest, the South Island Giant Moa, clocking in at around 400 pounds with a height of up to 12 feet when its neck was outstretched. That made it likely the tallest ever bird ever to have existed. 

    “I would hope eventually we can bring back all nine species of moa to really see and understand them and study them,” Jackson tells The Hollywood Reporter, adding that the collaborators hope to bring back the South Island Giant Moa first. It, along with other moas, went extinct around 150 years after Polynesians settled in New Zealand.

    “When you grow up in New Zealand, you grow up knowing about the moa. It’s just something that’s in our DNA,” continues Jackson, who, along with his partner Fran Walsh, invested $10 million in Colossal Biosciences last year. 

    Long fascinated by the moa, Jackson and Walsh have been collecting bones of the extinct bird for years. “We’ve collected about 400 moa bones,” says Jackson, explaining that they urged Colossal to add the moa to the list of species the company plans to resurrect from extinction. (The company has previously detailed plans to bring back the Tasmanian tiger, the woolly mammoth and the dodo.)

    “When we had our first Zoom call with Colossal a couple of years ago, the moa wasn’t on their list on their website. We said to them, ‘Are you interested in the moa? And [Colossal co-founder] Ben [Lamm] said, ‘Yeah, we sure are. So we made a condition of our investment that all of our dollars go into the moa project.” As part of the agreement, Jackson and Walsh are giving Colossal the use of their collection of moa bones for research. “So we were able to not just invest in Colossal, but also bring our bones to the table, as it were,” continues Jackson, whose upcoming projects include producing Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum, set for release in 2027. “And they’ve been sampled for DNA. We were very pleased about that.”

    In its request to bring back extinct animals, Colossal Biosciences uses a combination of genome mapping — using still-extant tissue and bones — and pioneering genetic engineering. The animals are not directly cloned from decades- or centuries-old tissue. Instead, a living, closely related species is genetically edited to produce the closest scientifically possible match of the extinct species. In the case of Colossal’s trumpeted dire wolves, the animals were created by developing the most complete genetic map ever made of the extinct species and then making 20 genetic edits of the genetic code of a near-cousin, the grey wolf, selecting for specific dire wolf characteristics. Some scientists have criticized Colossal’s dire wolf claims as “misleading,” saying that it’s an exaggeration to say that the species has altogether been brought back from extinction.

    To resurrect the moa — which was the subject of a 1973 DC Action Comics book in which it fought Superman — Colossal will need to work with the genetic code of the closely related tinamou bird, which is native to the Americas. Colossal Biosciences has already begun building reference genomes of the tinamou as well as of the emu, Australia’s species of large flightless bird. “We started in October on this project,” says Lamm. “In the next year, the project is really about sequencing bones and getting more and more [moa] samples and the research so we know what are the edits that need to be made.”

    The moa project is a partnership between the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre, Colossal and Jackson. The research center — which will take the lead in directing the moa efforts — was established in 2011 to support the Ngāi Tahu, the principal iwi (Māori tribe) of the southern region of New Zealand. In contrast to its work with other animals, explains Lamm, “we’ve taken a different approach [with the moa] where we are almost like a support function to the Māori.” Colossal believes the partnership “signals a new era of indigenous leadership in scientific innovation.”

    Kyle Davis, a Ngāi Tahu archaeologist who is working with Colossal and Jackson, explains the importance of the extinct bird to Māori culture. “This animal features in our oral histories. It’s iconic and what we call a taonga, a treasured entity from the past. It’s hugely significant to us,” says Davis, adding that “Peter [Jackson] is, through the cinematic medium, a world builder. And Colossal is a world preserver and restorer. So for them to accept the invitation to share our tribal dream of ecological restoration and adding de-extinction to that milieu is just an absolute honor and privilege.”

    If the partnership is successful, it’s likely that the birds will live in an ecological preserve in New Zealand. “The concept isn’t to release the giant moa into the wild. That’s certainly not the initial goal,” says Jackson. “New Zealand’s a very different country now to how it was 600 years ago. There’s roads, there’s cars, there’s cities, there’s so many more people. It’s not necessarily a good idea to just release it into the wild. That may happen, but it would happen, I think, decades down the track. It would have to happen after a lot of studying, a lot of thinking.”

    Adds Lamm, “Going back to the spirit of the partnership, it’s really up to the Ngāi Tahu. It’s really up to what they want. We look at ourselves as supporters of their vision.”

    Lamm, calling the moa project a “redemption story,” hopes that the efforts will inspire interest in ecology and biodiversity and drive ecotourism to New Zealand. As part of its commitment, Colossal Biosciences will also invest funds in helping preserve other species in New Zealand which are currently threatened with extinction or loss of abundance. “Saving and protecting what’s there — at the direction of the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre — is something that’s critical to the project,” says Lamm.

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  • Shaping the future of psychiatry with precision medicine

    Shaping the future of psychiatry with precision medicine

    In a comprehensive Genomic Press Interview published today in Genomic Psychiatry, Dr. Mirko Manchia opens up about his transformative journey from a small Sardinian city to becoming a leading voice in psychiatric pharmacogenomics, revealing how personal family experiences with mental illness sparked a lifelong quest to understand why psychiatric medications work brilliantly for some patients while failing others.

    The Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Cagliari has spent decades unraveling one of psychiatry’s most perplexing puzzles: why does lithium, psychiatry’s oldest mood stabilizer, transform some bipolar patients’ lives while leaving others searching for alternatives?

    From personal experience to scientific breakthrough

    Growing up in Sassari with no medical background in his family, Dr. Manchia’s path into neuroscience began with what he describes as “profound familial events” during adolescence that connected him deeply with mental health. This personal connection would later fuel groundbreaking research that culminated in a landmark publication in The Lancet, identifying genome-wide significant associations for lithium response in bipolar patients.

    “I saw patients who had severe illness trajectories and who had remained well after several years of treatment with mood stabilizers, especially lithium, while others experienced continuous recurrences with dire consequences on their lives,” Dr. Manchia reflects in the interview. This observation became the cornerstone of his research philosophy.

    Building international collaborations

    As a co-investigator and founding member of the International Consortium on Lithium Genetics (ConLiGen), Dr. Manchia has helped coordinate one of psychiatry’s most ambitious pharmacogenetic efforts. His meticulous phenotypic analysis of patient samples has been instrumental in identifying genetic markers that could predict treatment response before patients endure months of trial-and-error medication adjustments.

    The impact extends far beyond lithium. With 230 peer-reviewed publications spanning molecular genetics and clinical psychiatry, Dr. Manchia has established himself as a bridge between laboratory discoveries and real-world patient care. His dual appointments at Cagliari and Dalhousie University in Canada reflect this international reach.

    Precision medicine takes center stage

    Currently serving as chair of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) Bipolar Disorders Network, Dr. Manchia envisions a future where genetic testing becomes routine in psychiatric care. “We are at a point in psychiatric genetics where clinical utility is emerging,” he states. His current focus includes developing healthcare pathways that integrate pharmacogenetic testing for treatment-resistant depression and implementing AI-based predictive tools.

    What makes this vision particularly compelling is its practical application. Rather than pursuing abstract genetic associations, Dr. Manchia’s work centers on questions every psychiatrist faces: Which patient will respond to this medication? How can we minimize the devastating trial-and-error period that often characterizes psychiatric treatment? Can we predict and prevent treatment resistance before it develops?

    Addressing research disparities

    The interview also highlights a critical challenge facing psychiatric research: chronic underfunding compared to other medical specialties. Dr. Manchia advocates for increased investment, noting that oncology’s transformation followed massive research funding. “This could also be achieved in psychiatry, but we need to act in a harmonized way, involving all stakeholders, particularly patient and family associations,” he emphasizes.

    His approach to this challenge reflects the same patient-centered philosophy that drives his research. By involving patient organizations in research development and dissemination, Dr. Manchia believes the field can build the public support necessary for sustained funding increases.

    Looking ahead: Digital integration and beyond

    The interview reveals Dr. Manchia’s vision for psychiatry’s future, where digital monitoring, psychometric assessments, genomics, and brain imaging converge into comprehensive predictive models. Within 20 years, he predicts, these integrated approaches will fundamentally transform how mental health is managed and delivered.

    Yet despite these technological advances, Dr. Manchia’s motivations remain deeply human. When asked about his greatest passion beyond science, he mentions Roman history, classical music, and playing guitar – reminders that even cutting-edge researchers need balance and perspective.

    Dr. Mirko Manchia’s Genomic Press interview is part of a larger series called Innovators & Ideas that highlights the people behind today’s most influential scientific breakthroughs. Each interview in the series offers a blend of cutting-edge research and personal reflections, providing readers with a comprehensive view of the scientists shaping the future. By combining a focus on professional achievements with personal insights, this interview style invites a richer narrative that both engages and educates readers. This format provides an ideal starting point for profiles that explore the scientist’s impact on the field, while also touching on broader human themes. More information on the research leaders and rising stars featured in our Innovators & Ideas – Genomic Press Interview series can be found in our publications website: https://genomicpress.kglmeridian.com/.

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Manchia, M., (2025) Mirko Manchia: Exploring the biological landscape of psychiatric disorders to innovate clinical management with precision medicine approaches. Genomic Psychiatry. doi.org/10.61373/gp025k.0071.

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  • Google Maps is now available on Garmin’s smartwatches

    Google Maps is now available on Garmin’s smartwatches

    Garmin has announced that a free Google Maps app is now available for most of the company’s smartwatches that lets you know where and how far your next turn is while walking, cycling, or running.

    Unlike the more robust version of Google Maps available for Wear OS that can be used to search for destinations and even navigate without a smartphone, Garmin’s Google Maps app has limited functionality, similar to Google Maps on the Apple Watch. The Garmin app only provides basic turn-by-turn directions and you need to locate your destination using the Google Maps mobile app on an Android smartphone that has to be kept in range. On the app’s listing on Garmin’s Connect IQ store, there’s no mention of support for iPhones or iOS.

    Garmin says the app will gently vibrate your smartwatch when the next turn is delivered so you don’t need to be constantly looking at your wrist, and the app can show you your next three turns by simply tapping the screen. Your smartwatch will also continue to record your walking, running, and biking performance while you’re using the Google Maps app for navigation.

    The Google Maps app is now available for download from Garmin’s Connect IQ Store and is compatible with upwards of 90 different models of its smartwatches.

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