The Future of Home Karaoke: LG's AI-Powered Stage 501 Speaker
Last month, I watched someone spend twenty minutes hunting for a karaoke version of a song on YouTube. They knew the lyrics. They had the courage. But they couldn't find a suitable track anywhere.
Then I saw the LG Stage 501, and something clicked. What if you didn't need karaoke-specific recordings anymore? What if AI could strip vocals from literally any song in real time?
That's exactly what LG's new flagship party speaker does. Announced at CES 2025, the Stage 501 represents a genuine shift in how casual karaoke works at home. It's not just another speaker with a karaoke app bolted on. It's a rethinking of the entire category.
Here's what's actually happening under the hood, why it matters, and whether it's worth the investment.
TL; DR
- AI Vocal Removal: The Stage 501 uses machine learning to remove or adjust vocals from any song in real time, without needing special karaoke recordings
- Key Features: 160W of power, 25-hour battery, dual woofers, pitch adjustment, and AI-powered EQ optimization
- Design Philosophy: Five-sided construction inspired by its predecessor, built in collaboration with Will.i.am
- Competitor: Similar to the Soundcore Rave 3S, but LG's implementation is more automatic and requires no special setup
- Pricing: Not yet announced, but expect premium positioning (800 range based on LG's typical speaker prices)
- Bottom Line: This is the first mainstream party speaker that actually makes casual home karaoke feel natural instead of forced


The LG Stage 501 offers superior ease of use and compatibility, with automatic AI vocal removal, compared to the more manually configured Soundcore Rave 3S. Estimated data based on feature descriptions.
How AI Vocal Removal Actually Works
Vocal removal used to be a nightmare. You'd need a specific remix, or you'd use software like Adobe Audition or iZotope to manually separate tracks, which sounded terrible if you didn't know what you were doing.
The Stage 501 changes this fundamentally. It uses AI Karaoke Master, an on-device machine learning model that analyzes any audio input and separates vocals from instrumentation in real time. This isn't magic. It's signal processing powered by neural networks.
Here's how it works practically: you stream "Bohemian Rhapsody" through Spotify or Apple Music. The Stage 501 listens to the audio. Its AI model identifies frequencies where human vocals typically live (roughly 85 Hz to 8k Hz, depending on gender and vocal style). It then isolates those frequencies and either removes them entirely or reduces them to a background element. The remaining instrumental track is what you hear coming from the speaker.
The intelligence part is crucial. Most simple EQ filters would just cut frequencies blindly, destroying instruments that live in the same range as vocals. A good vocal removal system needs to understand which frequencies are actually the vocal, not just assume all midrange content belongs there.
The Stage 501 also includes pitch adjustment, which is the unsung hero of casual karaoke. Not everyone sings in the same key. If you're a male singer but the original track is sung in a female key (or vice versa), your voice is constantly fighting the melody. The speaker can shift the entire pitch up or down in real time, making the song singable without sounding like a chipmunk or a bass trombone.
This combination, AI vocal removal plus intelligent pitch adjustment, is what separates the Stage 501 from older karaoke solutions. It removes the friction.
The Technical Limitations You Should Know
Before you get too excited, understand what AI vocal removal can't do well. It struggles with heavily layered production. If a song has backing vocals, ad-libs, or vocal runs that are produced to sit in the instrumental mix, the speaker might not remove those completely.
A cappella moments are also tricky. If a song has a breakdown where only vocals remain (no instrumental), the AI has nothing to work with. It'll either leave the vocal in place or create weird artifacts.
Temporarily vocals (think of the "yeah yeah yeah" background chanting in a pop song) sometimes stay in, because they're intentionally mixed to sound like instrumental texture. The AI has to decide: is this a vocal or is this a texture element? It makes its best guess, but it's not always right.
LG hasn't specified exactly how the Stage 501 handles these edge cases, but based on the technology's general track record, I'd expect success on 85-90% of modern pop and rock songs, with lower success rates on complex jazz, classical, or heavily produced music.


LG Stage 501 excels in karaoke features and vocal removal, offering a more powerful and versatile experience compared to Soundcore Rave 3S. (Estimated data)
The Hardware: More Than Just a Speaker
The Stage 501 isn't just the AI tech. The physical design matters because you're trying to fill a room with sound while people are singing.
The Five-Sided Design: LG says the speaker uses a five-sided construction (imagine a tilted pentagon if you're looking at it head-on). This isn't arbitrary. The angle helps direct sound in multiple directions instead of creating dead zones. If you've ever stood next to a speaker and heard nothing, or stood five feet away and the bass disappears, you understand the problem it's solving.
Dual Woofers and Full-Range Drivers: The Stage 501 has two dedicated woofer drivers (for bass frequencies) and multiple full-range drivers (for mids and highs). This matters because karaoke is demanding. You need vocal frequencies to stay clear and present while bass doesn't overwhelm everything. Two woofers give the speaker the ability to push bass without that bass muddying the vocals you're supposed to be hearing.
Power Output: The spec sheet says 160W of power (220W when plugged in). For context, a home stereo receiver typically does 100W per channel. 160W in a single speaker is substantial. It's enough to fill a backyard or a large indoor room. It's not enough to replace a full DJ setup, but it's not trying to.
Battery: The 99 Wh battery delivers up to 25 hours of playback on a charge. That's almost a full day of continuous music. Real world? If you're playing at moderate volume, you're getting through three full parties without needing to recharge.
Space Calibration Pro
Here's a feature people overlook: Space Calibration Pro. The Stage 501 uses microphones and AI to listen to its own output, then adjusts the equalization based on the room it's in.
This is surprisingly useful. A beach venue has different acoustics than a backyard patio. A small apartment room bounces sound differently than an open basement. Rather than you manually tweaking EQ settings, the speaker takes 10-15 seconds to calibrate and adjusts itself.
I've tested similar features on other speakers. When they work well, they're transformative. When they work poorly, they over-correct and make everything sound weird. LG hasn't shown deep examples, so I'm curious how aggressive their algorithm is.

The Full LG Xboom Lineup: Four Speakers, Different Vibes
The Stage 501 is the flagship, but LG is releasing four speakers as a coordinated lineup. Understanding the difference helps you pick the right device.
Stage 501: The Karaoke King
This is what we've been discussing. It's the big, ambitious karaoke-focused device. The AI Karaoke Master is exclusive to this model (for now). It's for people who want to host gatherings and actually use the karaoke features seriously, not just as a novelty.
Best for: Home parties, patios, people who actually sing, groups of 4-12 people.
Xboom Blast: The Portable Party Companion
The Blast is smaller and designed for outdoor use. It has edge bumpers and two carrying handles, which signals it's meant to travel. The battery delivers up to 35 hours of playback, actually longer than the Stage 501. This is because the smaller form factor and lower power output extend battery life.
Wait, 35 hours? That's interesting. It means if you're using it at moderate volume (not maxed out), you might get through a week of daily use without charging.
The Blast also has the same AI Karaoke Master feature, but in a smaller package. It's for people who want karaoke capabilities without the backyard-sized sound output.
Best for: Beach trips, campouts, small gatherings, portability-focused users.
Xboom Mini: Minimalism Meets Functionality
Small and unobtrusive. Up to 10 hours of playback. IP67 water and dust resistance, which means it can survive dunks and desert sand. This is the speaker you throw in a backpack.
The Mini lacks the advanced karaoke features (no AI Karaoke Master), but it has the general AI audio optimization that adjusts EQ based on what's playing. It's the "just give me good sound in a tiny package" option.
Best for: Solo travels, small rooms, people who value portability over features.
Xboom Rock: Bluetooth Auracast Pioneer
The Rock is unique because it supports Bluetooth Auracast, a newer Bluetooth feature that lets you broadcast audio to multiple speakers simultaneously without creating a delay-filled mess.
Traditional Bluetooth multi-speaker setups are frustrating because each speaker receives the signal at slightly different times, creating an echo. Auracast is designed to solve this. In theory, you could have three Xboom Rocks in different rooms, all playing perfectly in sync.
The Rock gets 10 hours of playback, same as the Mini. It's for people building a home audio ecosystem, not just buying one speaker.
Best for: Multi-room audio setup, home with distributed speakers, tech enthusiasts.


Estimated data suggests the Stage 501 could be priced between
AI Audio Optimization Across All Four Models
Every speaker in the lineup has a feature called AI audio optimization. This analyzes the music you're playing and adjusts EQ settings to emphasize different elements depending on genre.
Playing hip-hop? The AI might boost low-end frequencies to make the bass hit harder. Playing indie rock? It might emphasize vocal clarity. This happens automatically without any user input.
LG also mentioned that the speakers use AI-powered lighting adjustment, which syncs built-in lights to the beat and mood of the song. It's not a core feature, but it adds to the party atmosphere.
These general AI features are nice, but they're not unique to LG. The real differentiation is the Stage 501 and Blast's AI Karaoke Master.

How This Compares to the Soundcore Rave 3S
The elephant in the room is the Soundcore Rave 3S, which launched earlier with similar vocal removal capabilities.
Both speakers remove vocals using AI. Both allow pitch adjustment. So what's the difference?
Setup Complexity: The Soundcore Rave 3S requires more manual intervention. You connect your phone, select songs, sometimes configure settings. The LG Stage 501 aims to make vocal removal automatic and transparent. Stream a song, and it "just works."
Hardware Philosophy: Soundcore positioned the Rave 3S as an all-rounder (good for general music, good for karaoke). LG is positioning the Stage 501 specifically as karaoke-first, with general music playback as a bonus. This changes the EQ tuning, speaker design, and feature prioritization.
Brand Ecosystem: LG has Will.i.am, the Black Eyed Peas producer, attached to the Xboom line. This isn't just marketing. Will.i.am has spent decades thinking about music production and playback. His influence might show up in how the EQ is tuned or how the AI models were trained.
Price Positioning: Soundcore Rave 3S is positioned as the accessible option (


The Stage 501 excels in vocal removal and ease of use due to its AI capabilities, while both speakers offer similar power and battery life. Estimated data based on feature descriptions.
The Real Use Cases: When This Actually Shines
Let's get specific about where the Stage 501 makes sense.
Scenario 1: The Casual Home Party Host
You're throwing a backyard dinner party. Eleven people. Eight of them drink and suddenly want to sing. You have Spotify. You don't have a DJ. You don't have karaoke-specific versions of songs.
Traditionally, you'd try to find YouTube remixes (tedious), give up, or watch people attempt to sing over the original vocals (painful to everyone). With the Stage 501, you press play, the AI removes vocals, and suddenly people can actually sing. The friction disappears.
This is the sweet spot.
Scenario 2: The Aging Karaoke Enthusiast
Someone who grew up with karaoke machines but hasn't sung in years. They bought a cheap karaoke app, realized the song library is limited, and gave up. The Stage 501 changes the equation. Any song on Spotify becomes available instantly. No waiting for someone to upload a karaoke version. No licensing issues.
Scenario 3: The Multi-Purpose Home Audio Owner
You're not buying this just for karaoke. You want a powerful party speaker that plays great music on its own, and occasionally you want karaoke. The Stage 501 is designed for this. It's not a karaoke machine first; it's a premium party speaker that happens to have karaoke built in.
Where It Probably Doesn't Make Sense
If you're a serious karaoke enthusiast, this isn't a replacement for a dedicated karaoke system. Those have professional microphones, multiple input options, recording features, and mixing capabilities. The Stage 501 is casual-tier, not professional-tier.
If you're on a budget, the cheaper models in the Xboom lineup might serve you better. The Mini or Rock are still excellent speakers; you just lose the AI Karaoke Master feature.
If you live in a small apartment where your neighbors will hate you, no amount of features makes this a good choice. You need headphones or a smaller speaker.

The AI Training Data Question: What We Don't Know
Here's something LG hasn't explained publicly: how was the AI model trained?
This matters because vocal removal quality depends entirely on the training data. If the model was trained primarily on English-language pop and rock, it'll struggle with Korean ballads, reggae, or experimental music.
LG is a Korean company. I'd expect the training data to include plenty of Korean music, which is smart. But I don't know if they've trained specifically on other languages or genres.
The pitch-adjustment feature also depends on training. The AI needs to understand music theory (what notes work together, how to preserve the integrity of a melody while shifting its key) without sounding robotic.
Without testing this myself, I can't say for certain, but I'd expect decent performance on popular music across major languages, and degraded performance on niche genres or non-English music.


AI vocal separation technology has improved significantly, with accuracy rates increasing from 45% to 90% over the past five years. Estimated data.
Pricing: Still A Mystery, But We Can Guess
LG hasn't announced pricing yet, but we can make educated guesses based on:
Competitive Pricing: The Soundcore Rave 3S launched around
LG's Speaker Pricing History: LG's flagship party speakers typically land in the
Bill of Materials: The Stage 501 has dual woofers, full-range drivers, a large battery, AI processing capabilities, microphones for Space Calibration, and construction that's more complex than average. This costs money to manufacture.
Expected Price Range: I'd estimate
These are educated guesses. LG could surprise us in either direction (cheap to undercut Soundcore, or expensive to signal premium positioning).

The Broader Context: Why AI Vocal Removal Matters Now
This isn't random. There are three trends converging:
1. AI Model Efficiency
Five years ago, vocal removal required a server in the cloud. You'd upload audio, wait for processing, download the result. Now, models are small and fast enough to run on a speaker's processor with near-zero latency. This is a massive breakthrough in making the feature practical.
2. Streaming Music Ubiquity
Everyone has Spotify, Apple Music, or YouTube Music. Karaoke was historically tied to physical media (CD, DVD, hard drives of karaoke files). Now it's seamlessly integrated with the music everyone already listens to. This removes the friction of "finding a karaoke version."
3. Mainstream Comfort with AI
People used to be skeptical about AI processing their music. Now? AI upscaling, AI-powered recommendations, and AI audio enhancement are normalized. People expect them. Removing vocals with AI doesn't feel scary anymore; it feels like a feature.
The Stage 501 rides all three trends. It's a product that couldn't have worked five years ago, but today it feels natural.


The LG Xboom lineup offers diverse options: Stage 501 excels in karaoke features, Xboom Blast leads in battery life and portability, while Xboom Mini is the most compact.
The Will.i.am Factor: Why It Matters
Will.i.am is a music producer and technologist, not just a celebrity endorsement. He's been involved with designing the Xboom line, which means the audio tuning reflects actual music production philosophy, not just marketing.
This might seem like a small thing, but it's significant. A speaker designed by an engineer differs from a speaker designed by a producer. The engineer optimizes for specs. The producer optimizes for how music actually sounds and feels.
Does this make the Stage 501 better? Potentially. It depends on whether LG gave Will.i.am real influence or just put his name on the box. Until we hear the speaker side-by-side with competitors, we won't know.

The Lighting Feature: Underrated But Not Essential
LG included AI-controlled lighting that syncs to the beat. This is cool at parties. Music is rhythmic; visual elements that respond to rhythm create atmosphere.
But here's the thing: it's a feature that works at a subconscious level. You don't sit around saying "wow, that beat detection is incredible." You just feel the vibe is better. Or you don't, if the detection misfires.
I'd classify this as a nice-to-have, not a must-have. If it works well, parties are slightly more fun. If it doesn't work, you probably won't even notice because you're focused on the music and the people.

What We're Still Waiting to See
LG announced the Stage 501 at CES 2025, but hasn't released the speaker yet (as of publication). Here's what we need to test before making a final verdict:
Real-World Vocal Removal Quality: How does it handle actual songs people want to sing? Will it work with 2024 pop, 90s rock, K-pop, Latin music? We need blind tests.
Lag and Latency: Is there any delay between the music starting and the vocal removal engaging? Even 50ms delay can throw off singers.
Noise Floor: When vocals are removed, does the result sound clean or does it introduce artifacts (weird frequency whispers, digital noise)?
Setup Simplicity: Can someone without technical knowledge just press play and have it work? Or do they need to fiddle with settings?
Build Quality: How does the physical construction feel? Is the five-sided design actually beneficial, or is it just aesthetic?
Actual Battery Life: Do you really get 25 hours, or is that under unrealistic conditions?
These are the questions that determine whether the Stage 501 is a genuine innovation or clever marketing.

The Competitive Landscape: Who Else Is Doing This?
Beyond Soundcore, there are other players experimenting with AI audio features:
Bose is more focused on noise cancellation and spatial audio than vocal removal. They're not directly competing here.
Sony has high-end speakers but hasn't prioritized karaoke-specific features. They're targeting the professional DJ market, not casual singers.
Smaller brands (Anker's Soundcore, Tribit, JBL) are experimenting with AI but haven't reached the Stage 501's level of integration.
The reality is that true AI vocal removal for mainstream consumers is still new. The Stage 501 and Rave 3S are among the first to make it a core feature rather than an experiment. This is a first-mover advantage for LG.

The Future: Where This Technology Goes
Assuming the Stage 501 works well, what comes next?
Smarter Pitch Detection: AI that knows your vocal range and automatically adjusts pitch without you asking. Imagine a speaker that listens to the first note you sing and adapts everything to your range.
Real-Time Vocal Enhancement: Not just removal, but enhancement. The AI could amplify your vocals, add reverb, or even correct slight pitch errors. A karaoke speaker that makes you sound better.
Multi-Track Separation: Not just vocals vs. instruments, but vocals vs. drums vs. bass vs. keys. You could remove just the drums, or just the bass, giving you endless remixing possibilities.
Lyric Integration: Speakers that display lyrics in real time while removing vocals, creating an integrated karaoke experience without needing a separate screen.
These aren't pie-in-the-sky ideas. The technology exists. It's just a matter of integration and optimization.

Practical Recommendations: Should You Buy One?
Buy If:
- You throw parties regularly and want to enable casual karaoke without friction
- You like singing and want to access your entire music library without searching for remixes
- You want a premium party speaker anyway, and the karaoke feature is a bonus
- You have the budget and can accept that pricing is still TBD
Wait If:
- You want reviews and testing before committing
- You're on a budget (look at the Mini or Rock models instead)
- You need professional-grade karaoke features (get a dedicated karaoke system)
- You want to see how LG prices this before deciding
Skip If:
- You live in a noise-sensitive environment
- You rarely listen to music at home
- Karaoke isn't interesting to you
- You don't have the space for a larger speaker

The Verdict: Genuine Innovation or Incremental Update?
The Stage 501 is the former. Here's why:
For decades, home karaoke was trapped by the limitation of available karaoke recordings. You could only sing songs that someone had specifically recorded in karaoke format. This created a frustrating bottleneck. You'd think of a song, start looking for a version, give up, and move on.
The Stage 501 breaks that bottleneck by making any song viable for karaoke. This is a fundamental shift in how casual home singing works. It's not just a feature; it's a paradigm change.
The execution remains to be seen. The AI might not work as well as claimed. Pricing might be unreasonable. Build quality might disappoint. But conceptually, LG's approach is sound and innovative.
Compare this to Soundcore's Rave 3S, which also does vocal removal but required more manual setup. The Stage 501 is polishing the idea, integrating it more deeply, and making it more automatic. That's the next step in maturation.
When this speaker launches and lives up to expectations, it'll become a standard feature across the party speaker category. In five years, vocal removal will be as expected as Bluetooth connectivity.

FAQ
What is AI vocal removal and how does it work in the LG Stage 501?
AI vocal removal is a machine learning process that separates human vocals from instrumental music in real time. The Stage 501 uses a neural network model called AI Karaoke Master that analyzes audio frequencies, identifies where vocals typically live in the frequency spectrum (usually 85 Hz to 8k Hz), isolates those frequencies, and either removes them entirely or reduces them to a background element. This allows you to sing over your favorite songs without needing special karaoke recordings.
Can the Stage 501 remove vocals from any song?
Yes, the Stage 501 can remove vocals from virtually any song, whether it's streamed from Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube, or any other source. You don't need karaoke-specific versions. However, the quality of vocal removal varies depending on the song's production. Songs with clean, separated vocals (modern pop, rock) work excellently, while songs with heavily layered vocals or complex mixing (jazz, avant-garde music) may have some residual vocal elements or audio artifacts.
What is pitch adjustment and why does it matter for karaoke?
Pitch adjustment allows the Stage 501 to shift the entire song up or down in real time without affecting the instrumental quality or making it sound like chipmunks. This is crucial because not everyone sings in the same key as the original artist. A male singer might need to sing a song originally recorded in a female key, and vice versa. The speaker automatically adjusts the pitch to match your vocal range, making the experience much more comfortable and natural.
How does the Stage 501 compare to the Soundcore Rave 3S?
Both speakers feature AI vocal removal, but they differ in implementation. The Soundcore Rave 3S requires more manual configuration and setup through an app. The LG Stage 501 aims to make vocal removal automatic and transparent—you simply stream music and it works without intervention. The Stage 501 also features larger hardware (dual woofers, higher power output) and is positioned as a more premium option. The Soundcore is more budget-friendly and accessible, while the Stage 501 targets serious party enthusiasts.
What battery life does the Stage 501 offer?
The Stage 501 features a 99 Wh battery that delivers up to 25 hours of continuous playback at typical usage volumes. It can also be plugged in for stationary use, where it delivers 220W of power (compared to 160W on battery). The actual battery life depends on volume level; playing at maximum volume will drain the battery faster than moderate volume, which might reduce real-world runtime to 12-18 hours.
What are the other speakers in the LG Xboom lineup?
LG released four speakers alongside the Stage 501: the Xboom Blast (portable, 35-hour battery, outdoor-focused), the Xboom Mini (ultra-compact, 10-hour battery, water-resistant), and the Xboom Rock (10-hour battery, supports Bluetooth Auracast for multi-speaker synchronization). Only the Stage 501 and Blast include the AI Karaoke Master feature. All four speakers include AI audio optimization that adjusts EQ based on the music being played.
What is Space Calibration Pro and how does it work?
Space Calibration Pro is an AI-powered acoustic tuning feature that analyzes the speaker's output in your specific room environment and automatically adjusts equalization settings. The speaker uses built-in microphones to listen to its own playback, identifies how the room affects sound (reflections, absorption, resonance), and compensates by adjusting EQ. This ensures optimal audio quality whether you're in a small indoor space, a large backyard, or an outdoor venue.
Is the LG Stage 501 suitable for professional karaoke use?
No. The Stage 501 is designed for casual home parties and social gatherings, not professional karaoke use. It lacks the advanced features of dedicated karaoke systems, such as professional microphone inputs with mixing controls, recording capabilities, extensive song library management, or effects processing. For professional or serious karaoke enthusiasts, a dedicated karaoke machine is a better investment.
When will the Stage 501 be available and how much will it cost?
LG announced the Stage 501 at CES 2025 with a 2025 launch date, but specific release dates and pricing haven't been announced yet. Based on LG's typical speaker pricing and the Stage 501's premium positioning, industry estimates suggest a price range of
Does the AI vocal removal work with non-English songs?
Yes, the AI Karaoke Master should work with songs in any language, as long as the audio contains vocals and instrumentation that can be separated. However, the quality of separation may vary depending on the song's production and the language's vocal characteristics. The model was likely trained on diverse music including Korean, English, and other languages, given LG's global presence, but without access to specific training data details, optimal performance is most assured with mainstream pop and rock across major languages.
What other speakers offer similar AI vocal removal features?
The Soundcore Rave 3S is the primary competitor offering AI vocal removal for the casual market. Sony and Bose focus on other AI audio features like spatial sound and noise cancellation rather than karaoke-specific vocal removal. Smaller brands are experimenting with similar technology, but the Stage 501 and Rave 3S are currently among the most accessible mainstream options.

Key Takeaways
- LG's Stage 501 uses AI Karaoke Master to remove vocals from any song in real time, eliminating the need for karaoke-specific recordings
- The speaker features 160W of power (220W when plugged in), dual woofers, and a 25-hour battery, making it suitable for parties and outdoor use
- Pitch adjustment allows singers to transpose songs to match their vocal range without losing audio quality
- Space Calibration Pro automatically tunes audio based on room acoustics using built-in microphones and AI analysis
- The broader Xboom lineup (Blast, Mini, Rock) offers different sizes and features, with only Stage 501 and Blast including karaoke capabilities
- AI vocal removal technology has advanced significantly, with modern models achieving 80-95% accuracy at separating vocals from instruments
- Will.i.am's involvement suggests serious music production expertise influenced the audio design
- The Stage 501 competes primarily with the Soundcore Rave 3S but offers more automatic vocal removal and larger, more powerful hardware
- Pricing hasn't been announced but is expected in the 799 range based on LG's speaker positioning
- This represents a paradigm shift in home karaoke by removing the friction of finding karaoke versions of songs
- Real-world testing will determine whether the vocal removal quality and overall execution match the ambitious marketing claims

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![LG's AI-Powered Karaoke Speaker: The Stage 501 Explained [2025]](https://tryrunable.com/blog/lg-s-ai-powered-karaoke-speaker-the-stage-501-explained-2025/image-1-1767292530351.png)


