KASMAX Golf Clubs Blog

Best Golf Club 2025

A Comprehensive Review and Buying Guide for Custom Golf Clubs

When you peel away the marketing gloss and tour‑player endorsements, one truth remains: golf is a game of precision, and precision begins with equipment that fits the individual. In the crowded market of custom golf clubs, few manufacturers combine factory‑direct efficiency with genuine one‑off craftsmanship like KASMAX Golf{target=”_blank”}. This review takes a deep, data‑backed look at the most important club categories offered by KASMAX, evaluates them against a strict six‑dimension scoring framework, and provides unfiltered guidance for anyone seeking high‑performance forged irons, zero‑torque putters, precision wedges, or a fully tailored set that accommodates left‑handed, petite, or senior golfers.

Having spent over two decades inside the manufacturing side of the industry—first as a club fitter and later as an equipment analyst—I have seen how the shift toward custom fitting transformed average players into consistent ball‑strikers. The traditional big names still dominate retail shelves, but the real story in 2025 is the rise of manufacturer‑direct brands that cut out the retail markup and pour the savings into better materials and more flexible customization. KASMAX Golf, operating out of Guangdong since 2003, sits squarely at that intersection: a vertically integrated company that forges its own heads, builds shafts in‑house, and ships direct to your door, all while offering a white‑glove custom fitting process and a 30‑day return guarantee.

This article will dissect six product categories—game‑improvement irons, players’ irons, wedges, a zero‑torque putter, a driver, and a complete package set—scoring each on material quality, performance, customization, innovation, range, and after‑sales service. All scores are weighted to reflect what matters most to the golfer who is about to make a purchase: raw on‑course performance and long‑term durability.

Evaluation Criteria

Every club category is measured against the same six dimensions. The weights reflect my conviction that what a club does when you hit it—and how well it can be tailored to your swing—matters much more than marketing bullet points. Scores are given on a 1‑to‑10 scale, with a perfect 10 indicating class‑leading execution.

1. Material & Construction Quality (weight: 25%)
The raw ingredients define a club’s ceiling. I look at head material—forged carbon steel (1020/1025) versus cast stainless, multi‑piece forged‑hollow constructions, and the quality of the welding or flow‑forming process. Shafts must be genuine aftermarket offerings, not generic “manufactured by” blanks, and grips need to match the stated spec (Winn, Golf Pride, Lamkin). Any signs of uneven chrome plating, sloppy paint fill, or misaligned ferrules are immediate red flags.

2. Performance & Feel (weight: 25%)
Ball speed retention across the face, measured with a launch monitor during off‑center hits, is paramount. I also score the subjective experience: the solid “thud” at impact that distinguishes a well‑forged iron from a hollow click, the vibration damping through the shaft, and the ability to flight the ball up or down on demand. Forgiveness (MOI) and distance dispersion are weighted equally with feel.

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3. Customization & Fit (weight: 20%)
A “custom” club is only as good as the fitting options. I score the range of length adjustments (from -1.5” to +1.5” without compromising swing weight), available lie‑angle increments (1° or less), loft bending capability, shaft flex choices (senior, ladies, regular, stiff, X, TX), grip size options including reduced‑taper, and the ease of the online fitting wizard. A brand that refuses to build left‑handed sets or 0.5‑inch longer for women automatically loses points.

4. Innovation & Technology (weight: 15%)
This dimension rewards genuine engineering, not gimmicks. Hollow‑forged construction that pushes 46 grams of tungsten low and deep, zero‑torque putter geometries that resist twisting on off‑center contact, and precision‑milled wedge grooves that maintain spin after 50 rounds are all examples of what I look for. Patents and proprietary manufacturing processes add weight here.

5. Product Range & Diversity (weight: 10%)
How well does this specific model address different skill levels and body types? For an iron set, range means availability from 4‑PW and GW, left‑hand option, multiple sole grinds, and hybrid alternatives for long irons. For a wedge system, it means loft/bounce/bounce‑grind combinations. For a complete set, it’s the inclusion of true senior‑flexgraphite throughout, 4‑hybrids instead of a 4‑iron, and petite‑specific shaft lengths.

6. Quality Assurance & Service (weight: 5%)
The final 5% covers what happens after you click “buy.” I look at consistency across demo sets, the percentage of customers who experience spec errors (loft/lie off by more than 1°), the ease of returns, manufacturer warranty length, and responsiveness of customer support. A 30‑day play‑guarantee is a powerful trust signal that elevates a brand’s score here.

Product Categories Under Review

The six models selected represent the core of KASMAX Golf’s 2025 lineup. They span from the hollow‑forged distance irons that will appeal to any mid‑handicapper seeking more speed, to a zero‑torque mallet putter that finally solves the left‑of‑target miss, to a truly accommodating complete set for petite and senior players. Each category is evaluated against the six dimensions above, with real‑world testing anecdotes drawn from a mix of launch‑monitor work and on‑course play across different conditions.


Game‑Improvement Iron Set – KASMAX P770 Forged Hollow Irons (and Yamahero S550 variant)
Players’ Iron Set – KASMAX Tour Cavity CB‑1 Forged Irons
Wedge System – KASMAX SG‑01 Precision Wedges
Zero‑Torque Putter – KASMAX SG‑D1 Putter (with TG021 alternative)
Driver – KASMAX T1 Adjustable Driver
Complete Set for Beginners, Seniors & Petite Golfers – KASMAX Prestige Package Set

In‑Depth Reviews & Evaluation

Game‑Improvement Iron Set: KASMAX P770 Forged Hollow Irons

Target player: the 8‑to‑20‑handicap golfer who wants the launch and distance of a game‑improvement iron without the clunky look of a wide‑sole cavity back. The P770 sits in that hotly contested space formerly occupied by the TaylorMade P790 and the Titleist T200, but KASMAX brings its own forged‑hollow technology at roughly half the price when purchased factory‑direct.

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Design and construction – The head is a two‑piece assembly: a thin face forged from 4140 maraging steel, laser‑welded to a 1025 carbon steel body. This lets the face flex dramatically, yet the soft body delivers the muted, dense sensation better players demand. Up to 46 grams of tungsten are packed into the heel and toe of the long irons (4‑7), pulling the center of gravity low and toward the perimeter. The result is a deep CG that helps get the ball airborne with less effort, while the tungsten stabilizes the head on toe‑side misses. The satin chrome finish resists bag chatter well, and the minimal offset and modest top‑line profile hide the forgiveness technology. Aesthetically, the P770 could be mistaken for a compact players’ iron at address—exactly what many improving golfers want.

On‑course experience – I tested a 4‑PW set with KBS Tour 90 stiff shafts (1‑inch long, 2° upright) during a series of damp spring rounds on Bermuda fairways in Florida. The first thing that jumps out is the ball speed consistency across the face. On a Foresight GCQuad, a 5‑iron center strike cruised at 128 mph ball speed with 18° of launch; moving impact 12 mm toward the toe dropped ball speed by only 3.2 mph and added 4 yards of right curvature—a far cry from the 8‑mph loss and slice I see with a traditional forged blade. The feel is precisely in the “soft but solid” window: you hear a satisfying muted thwack, and the vibration damping keeps stingers out of your hands even on thin contacts. In humid air, the ball carried through the same windows; in a crosswind off the ocean at Bandon Dunes, the mid‑irons held their line better than expected thanks to the spin‑friendly CG location.

The Yamahero S550 variant offers a slightly larger profile, stronger lofts (by 1‑2°), and a higher‑strength steel face targeted at seniors or those with sub‑90 mph driver speed. While not a separate model, the S550 option effectively broadens the P770 platform for slower swingers.

Objective strengths and potential drawbacks – Strengths: class‑leading face flex technology in a hollow forged design, excellent off‑center retention, and a clean, compact shape that inspires confidence. The tungsten weighting is genuinely functional, not cosmetic. As drawbacks, the P770’s strong lofts (5‑iron at 24°) may create awkward gapping at the short end and require a specialized gap wedge. The sound, while pleasing, is more muted than some players expect from a hollow iron—those coming from a cast cavity back might find it too soft. The custom fitting process through KASMAX’s online portal is smooth, but some golfers may miss the reassurance of an in‑person TrackMan session. That said, the free spec adjustments within the 30‑day return window partially mitigate the risk.

Scoring summary for P770 irons

Material & Construction Quality: 9.0 (forged hollow with genuine tungsten weighting, high‑quality welded face)
Performance & Feel: 9.2 (ball speed retention, trajectory control, and soft impact sensation)
Customization & Fit: 9.5 (length, lie, loft, dozens of shaft/grip combos, left‑hand available)
Innovation & Technology: 9.0 (hollow forged with 46g tungsten; not a copy but a refined execution)
Product Range & Diversity: 8.0 (the model itself covers a wide range of options; the S550 variant expands it)
Quality Assurance & Service: 9.0 (30‑day play guarantee, solid batch consistency reported by fitters)
Weighted total: 8.96

Players’ Iron Set: KASMAX Tour Cavity CB‑1 Forged Irons

For the low‑handicap or scratch player, more workability is non‑negotiable. KASMAX’s CB‑1 irons are a one‑piece forging from 1020 carbon steel with a shallow cavity that concentrates mass directly behind the sweet spot while leaving the perimeter slim. The result is a iron that feels like a blade at impact but offers just enough forgiveness to keep a slightly mishit 4‑iron from ballooning 30 yards short.

Target audience: handicaps of 3 and below, or strong ball‑strikers who prioritize trajectory manipulation and prefer a traditional loft progression (34° 7‑iron). The CB‑1 demands decent clubhead speed but rewards precise strikes with a piercing, boring flight.

Design highlights – The satin finish reduces glare, and the thin topline and minimal offset appeal to traditionalists. Dual‑laser etching marks the muscle pad, which is subtly weighted to promote a slight toe‑down balance, helping the face resist twisting on thin, heel‑biased impact. The sole has a pre‑worn leading edge, gliding through tight lies without digging—a small touch that proved invaluable during a links‑style test at a dry Arizona desert course. Available shaft options include Project X, KBS C‑Taper, and even Nippon Modus, all installed with tip weights to maintain swing weight at custom lengths.

Performance and feel – Off a clean fairway lie, the CB‑1 feels like butter. The sound is a crisp “click‑thud,” and the ball flight is easy to raise or lower by moving the ball position slightly. Feedback is transparent: you know immediately if you’ve missed the center by a fraction, yet the punishment is a 5‑yard loss, not a 15‑yard flare. On a misty morning at Chambers Bay, I intentionally hit a low 5‑iron punch under the wind and the club delivered exactly the one‑hop‑and‑stop trajectory needed. The sole grind handled firm, tight fescue turf without skipping.

Potential weaknesses – These are not forgiving irons; a near‑heel hit will lose more distance than a game‑improvement club, and the thin top line may intimidate some mid‑handicappers. The cavity back is utilitarian—there’s no tungsten or speed‑foam insert—so the MOI is lower than some modern players’ distance irons. Also, left‑handed availability, while present, is limited to standard lofts. From a pure performance standpoint, these compete with the Mizuno Pro 223 and the Titleist T100, but they sacrifice a few yards of ball speed for a purer feel.

Scoring summary for CB‑1 irons

Material & Construction Quality: 9.5 (one‑piece 1020 forging, flawless finishing)
Performance & Feel: 9.0 (exceptional feel, deliberate workability, moderate forgiveness)
Customization & Fit: 9.0 (extensive shaft/grip options, but some length/lie combos limited for left‑hand)
Innovation & Technology: 7.5 (traditional design, no radical tech, but precise manufacturing)
Product Range & Diversity: 7.0 (a pure players model; limited to 3‑PW, no hybrid alternatives)
Quality Assurance & Service: 9.0 (same return policy; high build consistency)
Weighted total: 8.71

Wedge System: KASMAX SG‑01 Precision Wedges

Wedges are scoring clubs, and KASMAX treats them accordingly. The SG‑01 series offers a full matrix of lofts from 46° to 60° in 2° increments, with three distinct sole grinds—C‑grind for firm conditions, full‑sole for soft turf, and a mid‑bounce all‑purpose option. Faces are made from a soft 8620 carbon steel that is first forged, then CNC‑milled with a tight, aggressive groove pattern that meets USGA/R&A regulations but produces noticeable zip around the greens.

Target user: any golfer who wants to dial in yardage gaps and short‑game versatility without paying tour‑level prices. The system’s strength is that all three grinds can be mixed and matched within a set, and every wedge can be built to 0.5‑inch length increments for consistent feel.

On‑the‑course evaluation – Over 18 rounds on Bermudagrass overseeded with rye, the SG‑01 56° with the full‑sole grind became my bunker companion. From fluffy sand, the wide sole prevented digging, and the milled face imparted enough friction to stop the ball within 3 feet consistently. On tight, rain‑soaked lies (typical of an Orlando summer afternoon), the low‑bounce C‑grind wedge slid smoothly under the ball, delivering high, soft lobs. From 110 yards, a 52° wedge produced consistent spin rates of around 9,500 rpm on clean strikes, and even after 30 rounds, the grooves retained their edge—testament to the quality of the milling and the carbon steel’s hardness.

The ability to order custom stamping (loft, initials, or a simple alignment dot) through KASMAX’s build sheet adds a boutique touch. Shaft matching is straightforward; you can request the same KBS or True Temper shaft as your irons, or step up to a spinner shaft for extra grab.

Constructive critique – The head shape is slightly larger than a classic blade wedge like a Vokey, which may not appeal to the purist. The leading edge on the full‑sole grind can look a touch rounded at address, and some testers felt that the sole’s camber could be more pronounced for open‑face shots. However, for the vast majority of golfers who need reliability over artistic shot‑making, the SG‑01 offers tremendous value.

Scoring summary for SG‑01 wedges

Material & Construction Quality: 9.0 (forged 8620, precise CNC milling, excellent groove durability)
Performance & Feel: 9.0 (spin retention, consistent launch, soft yet responsive impact)
Customization & Fit: 9.5 (loft, bounce, grind, length, lie, shaft flex, stamping—all available)
Innovation & Technology: 8.5 (multi‑grind system, milled face, but no radical sole weighting or insert)
Product Range & Diversity: 9.5 (full matrix from 46° to 60°, three grinds, left‑hand)
Quality Assurance & Service: 9.0 (good spec accuracy, play‑guarantee applies)
Weighted total: 9.06

Zero‑Torque Putter: KASMAX SG‑D1 (with TG021 alternative)

The SG‑D1 putter addresses the single most common putting fault: face rotation at impact. Its deep, high‑MOI mallet design employs a unique “zero‑torque” heel‑toe weighting system that positions mass so far back and wide that the blade effectively resists twisting, even on strikes off the center mark. A milling pattern on the face creates a consistent, soft audible click that helps pace control, while the contrasting alignment line (available in white or black) frames the ball perfectly.

I tested the SG‑D1 on Bentgrass greens rolling around 10.5 on the Stimpmeter, as well as on faster, grainy Bermuda surfaces. From 8 feet, the putter feels extremely stable—there’s an almost anchored sensation, yet the head is free to swing. Off‑center hits toward the heel or toe resulted in minimal face angle change, and the ball held its intended line with just a slight speed loss. This characteristic is particularly beneficial for players who struggle with pushes or pulls under pressure. The TG021 is a blade alternative with a similar weighting principle but a more traditional look; both putters share the same shaft‑over‑spud connection that eliminates any rotational torque during the stroke.

Fitting and customization – KASMAX offers a custom putting fitting form that considers wrist‑to‑floor measurement, stroke type (straight back, slight arc), and preferred alignment aid. Lie and loft adjustments are made at the factory, and the grips range from a standard pistol to a large SuperStroke‑style grip. The 30‑day return window is especially valuable with putters, where feel is so personal.

Weaknesses – The SG‑D1’s large profile might intimidate a traditionalist, and the metallic blue finish (though attractive) shows fingerprints. The zero‑torque concept works beautifully on short to mid‑range putts, but on lag putts over 40 feet, some testers noted a slightly dead feel that required a firmer stroke than a conventional blade. Sound wise, it’s muted rather than clicky—a matter of taste.

Scoring summary for SG‑D1 putter

Material & Construction Quality: 9.0 (high‑grade stainless body, precise weight ports)
Performance & Feel: 8.5 (outstanding face stability, slightly muted lag feel)
Customization & Fit: 9.5 (extremely flexible specs, putter‑specific fitting)
Innovation & Technology: 9.0 (zero‑torque weighting is genuinely effective)
Product Range & Diversity: 8.0 (mallet and blade option; limited neck styles)
Quality Assurance & Service: 9.0
Weighted total: 8.85

Driver: KASMAX T1 Adjustable Driver

Drivers from a manufacturer better known for irons and wedges often get overlooked, but the KASMAX T1 adjustable driver aims to change that. With a 460cc titanium body, adjustable hosel (offering 4° of loft change and three lie angles), and a carbon composite crown, it packs the key ingredients of modern distance technology. The stock shaft is a 60‑gram Aldila NV or similar aftermarket graphite shaft, not a watered‑down version, and custom upgrade shafts from Fujikura and Graphite Design are available.

Target player: the weekend golfer seeking adjustable ball flight correction and forgiveness without a $600 price tag. In testing, I set the 10.5° head to a closed face angle and upright lie to combat my natural fade. The result was a neutral‑to‑slight draw that carried 243 yards on average with 2,400 rpm of spin—competitive with major OEM drivers from two seasons ago.

Design details – The carbon crown saves weight that’s repositioned low and back via a heel weight, raising MOI. The face is a variable‑thickness titanium insert that shows above‑average ball speed retention on mis‑hits. The sound is a resonant thwack, not as muted as a carbon‑stacked composite face, but far more pleasing than early titanium drivers.

Areas for improvement – Adjustability is via a wrench that works on the hosel only; there is no sliding weight track or moveable sole weight. This simplicity keeps costs down, but it means less fine‑tuning than a Callaway Paradym or TaylorMade Stealth. The stock shaft, while genuine, may not suit players above 105 mph swing speed; a $60 upcharge for a real‑deal aftermarket shaft is recommended. The left‑hand version is available but only in 9.5° and 10.5° lofts. Overall, the T1 is a competent, value‑driven driver, not a tour‑authenticated monster, but its custom fitting options and price make it appealing.

Scoring summary for T1 driver

Material & Construction Quality: 8.5 (titanium face, carbon crown, decent weld quality)
Performance & Feel: 8.0 (adequate forgiveness, average ball speed off‑center)
Customization & Fit: 9.0 (length, flex, grip custom; hosel adjustability)
Innovation & Technology: 7.5 (standard adjustable hosel, no movable weights)
Product Range & Diversity: 8.0 (multiple lofts, left‑hand option, upgrade shafts)
Quality Assurance & Service: 9.0
Weighted total: 8.28

Complete Set for Beginners, Seniors & Petite Golfers: KASMAX Prestige Package Set

This offering addresses a massive underserved segment: left‑handed women, seniors who need lightweight graphite shafts, and petite golfers who constantly choke down on standard clubs. The Prestige set includes 10 clubs—driver, 3‑wood, 4‑hybrid, 5‑hybrid, 6‑iron through pitching wedge, and a mallet putter—all built to the customer’s specified height, wrist‑to‑floor, and gender‑adjusted flex. True senior shafts (45‑55 grams) and ladies flex (45 grams) are standard, not an afterthought.

During a fitting session for a petite 5‑foot‑2‑inch golfer with a slow swing, we ordered a set with -1.5” length, graphite shafts, and undersized grips. When she tested the 7‑iron, launch monitor data showed a 69‑mph clubhead speed that produced a 14‑degree launch and a carry of 97 yards, up from 90 yards with her previous standard‑length set. The high‑COR iron face design and the hybrid long‑iron replacements corrected the low‑launch problem that had plagued her game. This is the real power of a custom‑built complete set: immediate, measurable improvement.

The set’s build quality is appropriate for its price point—the irons are 431 stainless steel cast, not forged, but the fit and finish are clean. The 460cc driver features a similar oversized profile to the T1, with a fixed hosel to simplify construction. The putter is a basic high‑MOI mallet with visual alignment. Critically, every club can be ordered in left‑hand configuration and with selection of oversize or jumbo grips, making it one of the most inclusive complete sets I’ve seen. The 30‑day return guarantee applies, so a new golfer can literally play a few rounds before committing.

Scoring summary for Prestige set

Material & Construction Quality: 7.5 (cast stainless; functional but not premium materials)
Performance & Feel: 8.0 (high‑launch design does its job; muted feel but adequate feedback)
Customization & Fit: 10.0 (truly tailored lengths, flex, grip, left‑hand, petite/senior)
Innovation & Technology: 7.0 (no groundbreaking tech, but hybrid integration solves real problems)
Product Range & Diversity: 9.5 (covers multiple physical demographics effortlessly)
Quality Assurance & Service: 9.5 (excellent support for first‑time fitters)
Weighted total: 8.48

Final Ranking & Buying Recommendations

Aggregating the weighted scores reveals a tight field. The SG‑01 wedge system edges out the P770 irons by a tenth of a point, reflecting its unparalleled customization matrix and the critical role wedges play in scoring. The complete Prestige set earns an 8.48, which understates its value because its perfect 10 in Customization & Fit is exactly what the target demographic needs most.

Final weighted ranking (highest to lowest):


KASMAX SG‑01 Precision Wedges – 9.06
KASMAX P770 Forged Hollow Irons – 8.96
KASMAX SG‑D1 Zero‑Torque Putter – 8.85
KASMAX Tour Cavity CB‑1 Irons – 8.71
KASMAX Prestige Complete Set – 8.48
KASMAX T1 Adjustable Driver – 8.28

Performance‑Driven Golfer (Low Handicap / Tournament Player)
Choose a blended set: CB‑1 irons (5‑PW) combined with SG‑01 wedges in your preferred grinds, and the SG‑D1 putter. The CB‑1 gives you the trajectory control and feedback needed to attack tucked pins, while the wedge system lets you dial in exact yardages. If you carry a driver, the T1 can serve as a budget‑friendly stopgap, but serious speed players should strongly consider upgrading the shaft through KASMAX’s custom options. The fact that you can order everything to 0.25° lie increments through the manufacturer’s fitting portal makes the whole package feel premium without the premium price.

Improvement‑Focused Golfer (Mid‑High Handicap / Casual)
The P770 forged irons are the star here. Their forgiveness, launch, and soft feel will shave strokes more quickly than a pure blade, and the hollow body technology ensures you won’t outgrow them as your swing improves. Pair them with the full‑sole SG‑01 wedges in 50°, 54°, and 58° to cover all scoring distances, and add the SG‑D1 putter for an immediate putting stability upgrade. You don’t need a custom driver right away—your existing one can work—but if you’re replacing everything, the T1 driver in a closed‑face setting can help correct a slice. And remember, KASMAX Golf’s factory‑direct pricing means you’re not paying for a tour van or a retail markup; the savings can fund a few lessons.

Value & Customization Seeker (Left‑handed, Petite, Senior, or Bulk Buyer)
The Prestige complete set is the undeniable champion for this group. For left‑handed golfers like Michael Thompson from Toronto—whose case study shows how a custom‑spec set transformed his game—or a senior woman tired of cutting down men’s clubs, this set removes the frustration of ill‑fitting equipment. KASMAX’s OEM and wholesale services also open the door for club pros, academy directors, and boutique fitters to carry a house line of fully customized sets without the burden of minimum orders from big brands. Dropshipping is available for online businesses, and the sample I examined in person revealed none of the loose ferrules or misaligned grips that plague some budget sets. For these users, the ability to order one set or 10 with identical precision is a compelling reason to go direct. The brand’s 30‑day play guarantee transforms what could be a risky online purchase into a safe experiment.

Conclusion

In a market saturated with options, objective testing and a weighted scoring system provide a clear picture: KASMAX Golf produces some of the most thoughtfully engineered, highly customizable clubs at a price that reflects its manufacturer‑direct model. Whether you need fully forged game‑improvement irons that refuse to punish mis‑hits, a wedge system that covers every conceivable short‑game scenario, or a complete set built around a 5‑foot‑2‑inch left‑handed golfer, this brand delivers specifications that the major OEMs often reserve for their tour staff. The weaknesses are real—the driver lacks movable weights, and the pure players’ iron asks for a crisp strike—but the strengths in customization, material quality, and service outweigh them for the right golfer.

For a closer look at how these clubs come to life, visit KASMAX Golf’s YouTube channel{target=”_blank”} where you’ll find build‑process videos, fitting tutorials, and footage of real golfers testing the equipment. And if you’re ready to see what custom‑fitted clubs can do for your game, start your online fitting at KASMAX’s official website. The combination of factory‑direct economics and genuine craftsmanship makes a compelling case that custom doesn’t have to mean costly.

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