JK Rowling has composed another story on her Pottermore fan site, uncovering what Harry, Hermione and Ron look like in their Thirties.
Set throughout the Quidditch World Cup last, the story takes the type of a daily paper tattle segment composed by Daily Prophet correspondent Rita Skeeter.
In the article, Skeeter composes that Harry Potter, who is going to turn 34, has "several strings of silver in [his] dark hair", however says he keeps on wearring his "unique" round glasses.
She additionally notes that Harry Potter now "wears a dreadful cut over his right cheekbone" to go with his well known lightning scar.
Persuading more established gives off an impression of being taking its toll on Ron's hair as well, with Skeeter reporting that his acclaimed ginger yield "seems, by all accounts, to be diminishing marginally".
Indeed Hermione's hair gets a notice, with Skeeter taking a catty slight at her appearance regardless of her "fleeting ascent" to the Deputy Head of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement.
"She is currently tipped to go considerably higher inside the Ministry, and is additionally mother to child, Hugo, and little girl, Rose. Does Hermione Granger demonstrate that a witch can truly have everything? (No- take a gander at her hair.)," the tattle columnist composes.
The 1,500 statement article additionally reports that Harry took his children James and Albus to visit the Quidditch World Cup players' compound, "where he acquainted them with Bulgarian seeker Viktor Krum", however no more subtle elements are given about them.
Harry's wife Ginny is not show at the match, prompting substantial theory from Skeeter about their marriage.
"On the other hand does his harm have a more unassuming root, one that Potter is frantic to cover up? Has his wife maybe reviled him? Are splits starting to show in an union that the Potters are dead set to advertise as blissful?
"Should we read anything into the way that his wife Ginevra has been flawlessly euphoric to abandon her spouse and kids behind in London whilst covering this competition?," she composes.
Skeeter happens to make an alternate speculative claim about Ron's mental wellbeing, recommending that his demolition of Voldermort's Horcruxes has had a hopeless effect on him.
Presently living up to expectations for his siblings' joke emporium Weasleys' Wizard Wheezes, she asserts Ron has needed to step far from his employment at the Ministry of Magic for reasons he has not uncovered to the general population.
"Was the work of the Auror Department excessively for a man who has admited that the demolition of He Who Could Not Be Named's Horcruxes 'took its toll' on him? He hints at no evident emotional instability from a separation, yet general society is not permitted close enough to make a legitimate evaluation. Is this suspicious?," she composes.
Rowling, who won a security case in 2008 over the taking of her young child's photo, completes her article with a clear send-up of tattle columnists.
The writer, who has offered confirmation to the Leveson Inquiry and is a supporter of the Hacked Off fight, composes: "One dependably wavers to attack the security of youngsters, however the truth of the matter is that anybody nearly joined with Harry Potter harvests the profits and must pay the punishment of people in general investment."