The One Ring isn't so lonely anymore.

Star Wars: The Force Awakens swept up five Academy Award nominations in Thursday morning's announcement, bringing the series' total number of Oscar nods to 30. That puts Star Wars on even footing with Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings trilogy.

Oscar wins are another matter entirely. To date, Star Wars as a series has 10 statues, which doesn't even surpass The Return of the King's record-tying 11 wins in 2004. (King matched the amount of wins previously achieved by Titanic and Ben-Hur.)

Star Wars also still has a ways to go if you're looking at the Oscar nods for the Tolkien universe as a whole. Jackson's The Hobbit trilogy added another eight nominations and one win.

No other sci-fi/fantasy franchise stats even come close to Star Wars or Rings. The Harry Potter series (R.I.P. Alan Rickman) has 12 nods, the sum total of James Bond movies has 14, and both Batman and Star Trek have 15 apiece.

Inside the Star Wars-verse, The Force Awakens grabs the most nominations since Return of the Jedi in 1984. It's also got the same number of nods as all three prequel films — none of which ever won — combined.

The big winner in Star Wars continues to be the 1977 original, which scored 11 nominations — the same amount as The Return of the King — and seven wins.

A New Hope is also the only Star Wars movie to receive Oscar looks in any of the award show's major categories: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actor (Alec Guinness) and Best Original Screenplay. All three films in the Original Trilogy were nominated for Best Original Score, but only the first film won.

With two more films already planned in the new trilogy, plus three confirmed spin-offs, it likely won't be long before the sheer volume of Star Wars films bring in enough Oscar nominations to topple the towering 38 that the Rings/Hobbit series currently owns.

There's one higher Academy Awards mountain for Star Wars to scale: composer John Williams, who's written the score for every Star Wars movie to date (and many, many others). Williams has 50 — yes, 50 — career nominations as of 2016. That's more than any other film, series or living human.