Four handguns with text "Best New Pistols of 2025" in the center.

Best New Pistols 2025

We live in the golden age of firearms, with near-endless choices for all types of guns, from entry-level to big-budget. While there are some brands and models of pistols that have endured with minimal or no changes for decades, firearms manufacturers also need to innovate and come up with new models to attract customers and stay relevant. Let’s go over some of our picks for the best, most interesting, or most-anticipated new pistols this year.

Staccato HD P4 2011 (takes Glock mags!)

Black semi-automatic pistol on a white background.

A running joke in the gun community is asking whether every new firearm takes Glock magazines. Well, in this case, yes… yes it does! Staccato is effectively the current iteration of the previous (and well-regarded) Texas-based STI firearms company, and is the owner of the 2011 trademark. (A 2011, speaking generically, is a double-stack, higher-capacity 1911 platform, very popular in competition and SWAT law-enforcement circles.) Over the past 5 years, Staccato has produced multiple variations of their excellent 2011, and their latest offering, the Staccato HD, has earned significant buzz, not only because it accepts the ubiquitous, reliable, and inexpensive Glock 17-pattern magazines, but it also has a few new and clever tricks up its sleeve.

First, let’s look at the new HOST red dot pistol optics mounting system. All HD models receive Staccato’s updated system for direct-mounting (technically) of red dot optics, although a required plate is sandwiched between the optic and the slide. Model-specific optic spacers will eventually be available for all the popular optic footprints. However, unlike some traditional plate-based systems where the optic is screwed to the plate and then the plate is screwed to the slide, the Staccato’s system uses the plate as a locator/spacer and longer screws pass through holes in the plate and secure the optic to the slide, rather than the plate. This setup allows the use of longer, stronger screws, and removes one common point of failure.

Black semi-automatic handgun on a white background.

Additionally, the new Staccato optics-mounting system, combined with the new, longer dimensions at the rear of the slide, places the optic footprint as far as possible to the rear of the slide. This means that the rear iron sight has to be located in front of the optic (which many people prefer anyway), but it minimizes the likelihood of ejected brass (and carbon fouling) contacting the sight window. It also means you can mount the newer red-dot optics such as the Trijicon RMR HD or SRO with forward-set, larger windows, without interfering with the rear sight. Pretty slick. You have to purchase a $70 spacer for your particular optic to fill the space properly, which we don’t love. However, the benefits of this mounting system are significant.

The standard HD P4 (and forthcoming P4.5) will ship with the new 18-round, heat-treated carbon-steel Mec-Gar Glock-pattern magazines, featuring an anti-friction black coating. But any standard Glock-17-sized magazine will fit. The new steel subframe also includes milled surfaces to act as over-insertion stops for the Glock-sized magazines. So, what’s the big deal about a pistol being able to use Glock magazines? For a regular firearms enthusiast, it probably isn’t a huge benefit. The vast majority of pistols don’t share magazine compatibility with any other brand, and even different models within the same company frequently require their own proprietary magazine design.

However, for a competition shooter who might purchase 10, 20, or more magazines for their primary competition guns, the change to a well-known, inexpensive, durable, and readily available Glock-pattern magazine could be a significant benefit, both in convenience and in cost. Previous 2011-pattern mags have topped $140 each (or more; current pricing is typically around $70 per mag for standard capacity) and usually required significant tweaking by a knowledgeable person to get them to run reliably. Recent improvements in Staccato’s magazines have earned them a better reputation, but they’re still pricey. It may seem silly to complain about a $70 magazine for a $2,500 pistol, but when you buy 10 or 20 mags at a time, it adds up. For shooters just entering the 2011 space, the new HD line might be a godsend, especially for those who already have a lot of magazines for their Glocks (or Glock-compatible PCCs).

Close-up of a black handgun showing grip and slide mechanisms.

Another significant benefit of Staccato’s new HD platform will be for law-enforcement organizations and armorers who already maintain a fleet of Glock sidearms. Now, there doesn’t need to be a separate inventory of magazines for, say, a SWAT unit authorized to use the Staccato while the rest of the police force uses Glock 17s, G45s, G47s, or similar firearms. This move will simplify administration and significantly reduce overall costs while improving reliability.

Gun-savvy readers might wonder about whether the new HD’s use of the Glock-pattern magazine necessitates changing the grip angle, and the answer is no. A side-by-side look at photos of the standard Staccato and the new HD makes it appear as though the HD has a more raked-out grip angle, but this is because the HD has an extended backstrap that covers the rear of the magazine, and the bottom of the magazine well is flat, parallel with the slide, which looks strange if you’re used to the angled magwell of standard 2011s. The trigger guard is also larger and extends farther toward the front. And, the usual 2011 grip safety has been deleted for the HD. The upshot is, if you bust out your protractor or overlay the two images, you’ll find the HD has exactly the same 1911-esque grip angle (around 19 degrees from vertical) as legacy 2011s.

We’ve not been able to shoot the new HD yet, but the gun feels fantastic in the hand. The grip frame is actually slimmer than the usual Staccato 2011 double-stack models, and the excellent texturing and extended backstrap, combined with the lip at the bottom of the frontstrap, make for a very secure, comfortable hold. Removing the grip safety from the design was a good call, since the pistol is equipped with ambidextrous, extended thumb safeties, and is also equipped with an internal firing-pin safety, a first for Staccato. This should alleviate recent concerns that 2011s aren’t drop-safe when impacting on their muzzle (a common complaint for pre-Series 80 1911s). For a duty pistol, adding a firing-pin safety is a good move. It doesn’t seem to impact the quality of the trigger, either, which is a very nice, very crisp, 4-4.5 lbs, perfect for a CCW or duty gun equipped with thumb safeties. Plus, the trigger shoe itself is curved, serrated aluminum, rather than the polymer used on other Staccatos.

A close-up view of the front of a handgun.

You’ll also note that the extended slide release is now located on both sides of the pistol, so you lefties can rejoice. The magazine catch is also reversible.

Pricing for the standard P4 package is $2,499, which includes a stainless steel barrel (non-coated), an Ameriglo blacked out front sight, and 2 Mec-Gar magazines. (The new Mec-Gar Glock pattern mags have rounded indents, rather than sharp-edged mag catch cutouts, which allows them to be used in standard Glocks with polymer mag catches without causing damage.) The Preferred package ($2,699) buys you a black DLC-coated barrel, a Trijicon tritium front sight, and an extra magazine. The $2,999 Premium package gets all of the Preferred upgrades, plus Staccato’s X-serrations (milled cutouts) in the frame for extra badassery, plus a little weight savings and cooling effect. You also get an extra magazine, for a total of 4. By Spring 2025 we should see the Staccato HD P4.5, which features a 4.5” barrel and a fixed front sight that doesn’t reciprocate with the slide. Packages for the P4.5 start at $2,699.

That’s a lot of dough, by any standard. However, if you’ve ever handled or shot a Staccato, you’ll understand why they cost so much. The slide feels like it’s running on greased butter, and the lockup of barrel to slide, and slide to frame are absolutely impeccable. Combined with the low recoil of the 9mm cartridge in a full-sized, relatively heavy pistol with a crisp, 1911-style trigger, it’s a shooting experience unlike any other. Once you try one, you might never be able to shoot anything else and be satisfied.

Staccato HD P4 specifications (2025 model)

  • Caliber: 9mm
  • Operation: Recoil-operated, hammer-fired SAO
  • Barrel length: 4.0", bull configuration (no bushing)
  • Weight: 32 oz
  • Frame material: Polymer grip frame, 4140 billet steel subframe
  • Recoil System: 4.0" flat wire
  • Length: 7.6"
  • Height: 5.5"
  • Width: 1.6" (1.3" at grip)
  • Magazine: Steel, anti-friction coated, Mec-Gar 18-round Glock pattern
  • Price: $2,499-$2,999 depending on options

Springfield Echelon 4.0C

A black semi-automatic handgun on a white background.

Springfield shook up the striker-fired duty-pistol world in mid-2023 with the release of the new Echelon, an attractive, well-featured pistol the approximate size of the Glock 17. Since its release, fans and potential customers have been asking Springfield when their carry-sized version would hit the market, and it’s finally here. For 2025, the Echelon 4.0C (C for Compact) has dropped, with a 4-inch barrel, a shorter grip frame, and overall dimensions similar to the extremely popular Glock 19 compact pistol.

Like its full-sized brother, the 4.0C Echelon is a chassis-based pistol, utilizing what Springfield calls a Central Operating Group. This type of pistol design is becoming more mainstream, and allows the user to swap grip frames and even slide assemblies at will, without the hassle or expense of purchasing additional complete firearms, since the stainless-steel COG is legally considered the serialized handgun. The 4.0C comes from the factory with the Small grip module installed, but Medium and Large grip modules are available direct from Springfield in 3 colors, for just $64.99. The Echelon also comes with three sizes of interchangeable backstraps (Small, Medium, and Large), which fit any of the grip modules, and which each contain an integral armorer’s tool (essentially a steel punch to drive out the pins to swap modules).

A semi-automatic pistol with a reflex sight mounted on top.

One thing we love about the Echelon is its Adaptive Grip Texture stippling, which comprises tall pyramid shapes with flattened tops, and shorter ones that come to a sharp point. It sounds like a gimmick, but it really works. The flat tops of the tall pyramids mean that the grip texture doesn’t abrade your skin as you carry inside the waistband (IWB), while the sharper, shorter shapes grip firmly into your skin when you grip the pistol—very neat stuff. Unlike many polymer pistols, the Echelon is textured fully around the grip and well up the side of each grip panel, as well as on the index points on the frame forward of the trigger, underneath the trigger guard, and even on the nose of the recoil spring guide rod.

This latter item highlights what is potentially a life-saving feature of the Echelon system, that of stand-off capability. On nearly all semi-auto CCW/duty pistols, if you press the nose of the firearm into an attacker, the slide will retract enough to take it out of battery and disable the pistol. The Echelon’s solid guide rod and thoughtful design keeps the slide from retracting out of battery and allows the pistol to fire if pressed straight into an opponent in a struggle.

A black semi-automatic handgun with textured grip and accessory rail.

The 4.0C Echelon gets all of the well-liked and well-thought-out features of the full-size, including aggressive slide trenches and serrations at the front, a flared slide at the rear, excellent high-visibility night sights, a very nice trigger, fully ambidextrous controls (including the magazine release), and Springfield’s patent-pending Variable Interface System for mounting red-dot optics. This intelligent new system allows the direct mounting of over 30 of the most popular red-dot optics on the market, without requiring the use of any adapter plates or spacers. The result is that you can use longer, stronger screws, and most optics will co-witness with the standard iron sights without modification. This is a trend we hope other manufacturers will follow.

A black semi-automatic handgun on a white background.

The 4.0C comes standard with one 15-round and one 18-round extended magazine, the latter equipped with a textured grip sleeve that essentially extends the grip. The 17- and 20-round magazines from the full-sized Echelon will also fit and function in the 4.0C. Starting at a very reasonable $679 MSRP, the Echelon 4.0C is available in 3 colors (black, desert FDE, and OD green), threaded-barrel models, and even with the addition of ambidextrous, frame-mounted thumb safeties for states where they are required. Of the wide array of striker-fired polymer duty/CCW pistols available today, the Echelon is definitely one of our favorites.

Springfield Echelon 4.0C specifications

  • Caliber: 9mm
  • Operation: Recoil-operated, striker-fired
  • Barrel length: 4.0" hammer-forged steel, Melonite coating
  • Weight: 24 oz
  • Frame material: Polymer (stainless steel Central Operating Group), three colors available
  • Recoil system: Captive spring, stand-off capable guide rod
  • Sights: Tritium front, tactical rack U-dot rear
  • Length: 7.25"
  • Height: 5.125" w/flush mag, 6.125" w/ extended mag
  • Width: 1.2" at grip
  • Magazine: Steel, anti-wear coated, 15- and 18-round mags included
  • Price: $679-$739 depending on options

FN Reflex XL

A tan semi-automatic pistol with a red dot sight.

FN has a long and storied history of making excellent firearms, but their polymer-framed pistols have suffered from some questionable QC issues over the past 15 years or so. The company is working hard to rectify any problems and their latest offerings have been well received. The new Reflex XL is FN’s so-called Macro-sized micro-compact. If that sounds confusing, it’s because it is. SIG pioneered the modern micro-compact 9mm pistol craze with its excellent P365, but it was actually so small that many shooters wished it were slightly larger, with more to hold onto, and more capacity. So they came out with several larger sizes of the super-small pistol. These larger versions of super-small pistols have commonly become known as XL or Macro guns, and thus we have the FN Reflex XL.

You might be asking what’s the point of making a small gun larger, as these Macro-style firearms are all made by manufacturers that also make standard duty-sized and compact pistols. Well, in addition to adding a new firearm to the market, which attracts attention and creates media buzz, these types of pistols offer the capacity and features of their full-sized counterparts, but in a significantly slimmer, lighter, and smaller package that’s easier to carry all day. Recoil can be a bit sharper than the legacy-sized semi-autos, but that’s to be expected from these lighter pistols. And the 9mm doesn’t produce punishing recoil anyway, so for the most part these XL or Macro-style pistols offer nearly all the benefits of traditional pistols, but in a smaller package that’s perfect for CCW use.

Black semi-automatic handgun on a white background.

The Reflex XL looks like one of FN’s striker-fired pistols, but instead utilizes a fairly uncommon, internal hammer-fired, single-action trigger system. The trigger breaks at about 4.5-5 lbs, similar to the best non-custom striker-fired guns, but is a little crisper with a quick reset. It’s very nice and makes the Reflex feel easy to shoot. Currently, the Reflex XL is only offered without a manual thumb safety. We imagine FN might come out with that option if there’s significant interest. Regardless, FN says all models feature multiple internal passive safeties including firing pin block, trigger safety and fire control safety.

Available in either black or FDE colors, the Reflex XL is an attractive pistol, combining a rounded trigger guard with angular milled surfaces on the slide. The backstrap is replaceable, and the magazine catch is reversible, but the slide stop is non-ambidextrous. The slide is milled for the direct mounting of micro red-dot optics that share the Shield RMSc or Holosun 507K footprints, and with most of these types of optics you can cowitness the factory iron sights through the bottom portion of the optic’s window. Speaking of the irons, the Reflex XL is fitted with a high-visibility tritium front night sight (with bright-orange painted outer ring), and an all-black, squared U-notch rear sight. It’s a fast and easy sighting system, should you decide not to mount a red dot.

A tan semi-automatic handgun with a textured grip.

FN says the FN Reflex XL utilizes their easy-rack system, and the pistol does seem a little easier to rack the slide on than some other small-format firearms. Overall, the handling and shooting experience is very pleasant. The grip texture is good, the aggressive checkering molded into the front- and backstrap is effective, and the standard 15-round capacity is impressive considering the pistol is just over 5” high with the flush-fit magazine, and just a hair over an inch wide. It also only weighs 20 ounces. Handling the XL and a Glock 19 (which also has a 15-round magazine) back-to-back clues you in on just how impressive these new Maco-sized carry guns are, as the Glock 19 feels relatively large and blocky by comparison.

For more restrictive states, 10-round magazines will be provided, but where permitted, the Reflex XL will ship with a flush-fit 15-round mag as well as an extended (and sleeved) 18-round mag. MSRP is $719, but we imagine that will come down significantly as supply catches up with demand. FN’s new Macro-sized CCW pistol offers a solid feature set and good looks, and we think it’s going to be a winner.

FN Reflex XL specifications:

  • Caliber: 9mm
  • Operation: Recoil-operated, internal hammer-fired SAO
  • Barrel length: 3.8" cold hammer-forged stainless steel, recessed target crown, polished chamber and feed ramp
  • Weight: 20 oz
  • Frame material: Polymer, 2 colors available
  • Recoil system: Captive spring
  • Sights: Tritium orange-outline front, serrated black U-shaped rear
  • Length: 6.75"
  • Height: 5.2"
  • Width: 1.08"
  • Magazine: Steel, anti-corrosion finished, 15- and 18-round mags included (10 where legally required)
  • Price: $719

Kimber 2K11

A semi-automatic handgun with a red dot sight and brown accents.

As noted above, Staccato owns the trademark for the name 2011 as it relates to pistols, but Kimber obviously found a way around it with their new 2K11, the first double-stack 1911-style pistol from Kimber in decades. The 2011-style pistol market is getting hot, with multiple new offerings added and new manufacturers joining the fray every year. Kimber has been known for making quality 1911s for many years, with some stumbles along the way due to periods of financial turmoil and resulting QC problems. However, their recent pistols have returned to the excellent quality of the original Kimbers, when they began stealing significant market share from Colt and other 1911 builders.

The 2K11 isn’t just another 2011 clone, though. Most 2011-style pistols utilize a steel or aluminum frame mated to an interchangeable polymer gripframe and trigger guard assembly. Kimber has chosen to make their 2K11 gripframe from 7075 aluminum alloy, which is then type 3 hard-anodized and precisely fit to a DLC-coated stainless-steel subframe. Other 2011-platform makers have offered aluminum gripframes, but it’s usually a $400-$600 dollar upcharge. The machined checkering on the 2K11 is not tear-you-up aggressive, but is about a medium texture that’s very useful when you grip it firmly, and the pistol feels great in the hand and balances well.

Black semi-automatic pistol with an orange accent and extended magazine.

Interestingly, the 2K11 uses an external extractor, even though most of Kimber’s 1911s use the traditional (and potentially finicky) internal 1911-style extractor. Kimber’s choice to go with an easily serviceable and reliable external extractor for their double-stack gun is a good thing, as these guns are intended for high-round-count competition use, and internal extractor channels are known for collecting gunk and debris. Plus, you have to re-tune your internal extractor every few thousand rounds and make sure it’s still doing extractor things. It’s just a quirk of the century-plus-old 1911 design. The 2K11 does away with all of that.

Another innovation Kimber is launching with the new 2K11 is their new toolless guide rod, which foregoes with the button-latch of the Dawson style, and the hassle of the bent paper clip takedown on many legacy 1911/2011 guns with reverse guide plugs. And 2-piece threaded guide rods inevitably come loose with messy results. The Kimber’s guide rod is indeed a 2-piece, but there’s an internal detent and spring that makes sure it can’t come unscrewed under hard use. To take the recoil spring assembly out of the slide, you simply compress the guide rod against the spring until the rod extends out of the front of the slide, grasp the textured grooves on the last half-inch or so of the rod, give it a half turn counter-clockwise, and it locks the spring in place for removal and cleaning of the recoil spring assembly. It’s a big improvement over other designs, and we expect it will become widely used.

A semi-automatic handgun with a black and brown design.

One quirk of the 2011 and clones is the potential for over-insertion of extended magazines, which are popular among competition shooters. Without a firm mechanical stop to prevent the magazine body from traveling too high inside the frame, an enthusiastic shooter can slam a magazine into the pistol so hard that it can bend the ejector and cause serious problems. The 2K11 is perhaps unique in this market, in that the aluminum grip frame is restricted internally near the top where the magazine tapers, which prevents over-insertion of nearly all 2011-pattern magazines. This is a good thing, but it also means that the budget-level MBX magazines don’t lock into the pistol, since their dimensions are just slightly different. However, this is a small price to pay for increased reliability, and many serious shooters don’t use MBX magazines anyway.

At this price point (around $2,100-$2,500) there are several other 2011-pattern guns to consider, and some of them are excellent (the BUL Armory models in particular are extremely good for the price). However, they are typically finished in either black Cerakote, black PVD, or are simply blued to keep costs low. The 2K11 gets black DLC coating and polished Coyote PVD on its stainless barrel and slide, in attractive gold-and-black combinations depending on the model you choose. The fixed-sight base model (if you can call any premium pistol by that name) gets a bronze-looking coyote PVD barrel and a polished black DLC slide, while the Target model (with adjustable rear sight) gets a black DLC barrel and a polished bronze/gold coyote PVD slide. The 2K11 really stands out aesthetically against any competition in this price range.

A black and brown handgun viewed from the front.

The slide milling is good-looking as well, with non-traditional shapes in the slide serrations, tri-top slide milling, and a rakish angle at the nose of the 3-slot picatinny rail that extends up into the slide cuts. The Target model gets a Stan Chen magwell, also in the attractive bronze color, that is usefully wide internally but which is small enough to allow the pistol to fit inside the IDPA box.

Both models include optics cuts on the slide for mounting a red dot, and the respective rear sights are integrated into the slide cut covers. This means you can’t (currently) co-witness the rear sight if you mount an optic, but we understand optional mounting plates that include a backup iron rear sight will eventually be available.

The slide fit to the frame is extremely nice, with the barest minimum of perceptible side-to-side or up-and-down movement, and the slide’s action is about the smoothest we’ve ever tried on any semi-auto pistol at any price. The trigger is aluminum, has almost no takeup, and releases at about 3.25-3.5 lbs of pressure after break-in. Another somewhat rare feature is that the 2K11 is available in both 9mm and .45 ACP, the former using 17-round flush fit or 20-round extended 2011-pattern magazines, and 13 rounds for the big .45. If you’ve got the dough and want a lot of double-stack 1911 quality for the money, the Kimber is one of the better options out there today.

Kimber 2K11 specifications

  • Caliber: 9mm or .45 ACP
  • Operation: Recoil-operated, hammer-fired SAO
  • Barrel length: 5" fluted stainless steel match, recessed target crown, 5R rifled, ball-end milled (in 9mm)
  • Weight: 40.1 oz (.45 ACP); 40.9 oz (9mm)
  • Frame material: Type III hard-coat anodized 7075 aluminum gripframe, DLC-coated stainless subframe
  • Recoil system: Reverse 2011-type guide rod, toolless captive spring
  • Sights: TAG FiberLok 2 green front; aluminum cover plate with built-in fixed or adjustable rear
  • Length: 8.56"
  • Height: 5.74"
  • Width: 1.4" at frame
  • Magazines: (1) Stainless steel, Checkmate, 17-round and (2) 20-round (9mm); or (3) 13 round (.45 ACP)
  • Price: $2,125 (2K11); $2,595 (2K11 Target)

Glock 17L Gen 5

A black semi-automatic pistol on a white background.

Old-school Glock fans can finally rejoice, as Gaston’s plastic fantastic is finally available as a long-slide Glock 17L variant in the Gen5 MOS model. Glock made a few (very rare) 17Ls in Gen1, and released limited runs of the 6” barreled, competition oriented 17L guns in Gen2 and Gen3 configuration, but never made any Gen4 17Ls, and it’s never been part of the standard catalog until now. So why would you want a long-slide Glock? Because they’re different, they’re very cool, and they shoot great. Originally the intent was to increase the sight radius for improved accuracy for IPSC-type iron-sight shooters, with some added velocity (and increased power factor) courtesy of the 1.5” longer-than-standard barrel. However, since IDPA and USPSA Production and Carry Optics divisions were modified to require that firearms fit within a certain box, the 17L became pistola non grata, and the Glock 34/35 was created to adhere to the rules, becoming the hottest selling Glocks among competition shooters for the past couple of decades.

A black handgun with measurements displayed beside it.

Still, Glock fans, collectors, and shooters loved the original 17L configuration (and its .40-caliber sibling, the G24), and in 2025 they finally get their wish for a fully up-to-date, optics-ready, Gen5 version. The new 17L is a tad heavier than the standard Glock 17, at 25.4 ounces empty, but otherwise gets all the same features and goodies inherent to the Gen5 guns. The 17L gets a bull-nose slide, Glock Marksman barrel, flared integral magwell, ambidextrous slide lock levers, interchangeable backstraps including 2 beavertail options, extended reversible magazine catch, enlarged magazine floorplates, orange magazine followers, nDLC finished slide, forward slide serrations, and the improved Gen5 trigger. And of course, the much-maligned finger grooves have been removed from the RTF-textured frame. Let us rejoice! MSRP is ostensibly about $850 (Glock doesn’t publish their MSRP, typically), but we’ve seen the new Gen5 17L at online dealers for about $710 already. That’s a tad more than the typical Glock, but with the 17L you get a tad more than the typical Glock.

A black semi-automatic handgun displayed at an angle.

Glock 17L Gen5 MOS specifications

  • Caliber: 9mm
  • Operation: Recoil-operated, striker-fired Safe Action
  • Barrel length: 6.02", carbon steel Marksman
  • Weight: 25.4 oz
  • Frame material: Nylon-based polymer
  • Recoil system: 2-stage captive spring
  • Sights: Standard polymer Glock square U-dot (slide milled for MOS)
  • Length: 9.45"
  • Height: 5.47"
  • Width: 1.34" at widest point, 1.00" at slide
  • Magazine: Polymer, steel-lined, orange follower Gen5 17-round
  • Price: $851 MSRP; $710 street

Honorable mentions for best new pistols 2025

The pistols above are the ones we find most interesting out of this year’s crop of new guns, but you might feel differently. Check out the new pistols below and see if any of them tickle your fancy.

Store all your pistols in a quality Liberty Safe

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