Tools

Best To-Do List Apps of 2026: 9 Tested & Ranked

Switching between Google Calendar, sticky notes, email flags, and a half-finished notebook isn’t working anymore. This scattered effort to stay organized leaves you missing deadlines, forgetting follow-ups, and spending more time managing your to-do list than getting things done. That ends now. As a SaaS content writer, I’m constantly managing research, client deadlines, and content calendars across different projects. My work led me down the rabbit hole of finding to-do list apps that can help me juggle multiple freelance clients and run my daily life. Some apps lasted a week before I abandoned them. Others stuck around but felt like overkill for my needs. A few became essential parts of my workflow. What I learned was that there’s no universal or one-size-fits-all to-do list app. The app you eventually choose depends entirely on your workflow, team size, and how your brain works.  This guide covers the apps worth your time, based on real-world testing with client projects, recurring deadlines, and the chaos of freelance life. I’ll tell you what each app does well, where it falls short, and who should use it. How I tested these to-do list apps I tested these apps by using them to manage my work and day-to-day activities. For the tests, I focused on five key factors: how quickly I could add tasks, whether it synced reliably across devices, how well it handled different organizational styles, pricing for solo users and small teams, and whether I completed the tasks I added. Robust project management tools such as Asana and Monday.com are not on this list. Those are overkill if you just need a solid to-do list. I also skipped apps that required extensive setup before being useful. If it takes 30 minutes to configure before you can add your first task, it didn’t make the cut. The apps that survived testing either solved a specific problem really well or offered the best balance of features and simplicity for everyday use. Best To-Do list apps at a glance App Best For Starting Price Key Strength Platform TickTick Freelancers who need a calendar + tasks + habits $35.99/year Calendar view + Pomodoro + habit tracking included All platforms Todoist Power users who love keyboard shortcuts $58/year Clean interface, powerful filters All platforms Microsoft To Do Microsoft 365 users Free Deep Outlook integration All platforms Things 3 Mac/iOS users who want elegance $49.99 (Mac) Beautiful design, intuitive Mac/iOS only Google Tasks Gmail power users Free Built into Gmail/Calendar All platforms Any.do People who forget to use to-do apps $59.88/year Daily “Plan My Day” prompts All platforms Apple Reminders Casual Apple users Free Native Apple integration Apple only Notion Teams who need docs + tasks Free/$10/user/month Flexible databases All platforms Default phone apps Minimalists Free Already installed iOS/Android What makes a great to-do list app? For a to-do list app to be considered one of the greats, it needs to: Best all-in-one to-do list for freelancers: TickTick TickTick is what happens when you combine a to-do list, calendar, habit tracker, and Pomodoro timer in one app without the bloat.  I’ve been using TickTick for almost a year now, and it has become my central system for managing client deadlines, recurring invoicing, and personal goals. Most to-do apps force you to choose between simple (but limited) and powerful (but complicated). TickTick somehow manages both. The free plan is generous enough for serious use.  For example, TickTick’s free tier lets you create nine lists and 99 tasks per list. You also get 19 subtasks and two reminders per task. The premium plan adds features I need without charging premium prices. There’s also the native Pomodoro timer for deep work sessions.  It tracks how much time I’m spending on each task, which is invaluable for estimating future projects. For instance, I know a 2,500-word article takes me about four to five 30-minute sessions. No need to juggle TickTick, a separate timer app, and a time tracking tool. Everything lives in one place. Beyond client work, TickTick has a Habit Tracker that I use to track writing habits, exercise, and reading. Having habits and tasks in one app means I don’t have to check multiple tools to see what I should be doing right now. The streak tracking motivates me to maintain consistency. When I see a 47-day writing streak, I don’t want to break it over one lazy morning. TickTick also has native apps for Mac, Windows, iOS, Android, plus a web app and browser extensions. Your tasks sync instantly across devices. I can add a task from my phone while grocery shopping and find it on my desktop two minutes later. Key features Pros Cons How I use TickTick as a freelancer I organize client work into separate projects for each client. One project for ongoing retainer work, another for one-off projects. Each project has recurring tasks for invoicing (first of the month), check-ins (weekly), and deliverable deadlines. This keeps client work compartmentalized so I’m not mixing research for Client A with deliverables for Client B. For research-heavy articles, I use TickTick’s note feature to store reference links and key points directly in the task. When it’s time to write, everything I need is right there. This is especially helpful for expert interview articles where I’m tracking interview notes, quotes, and follow-up questions all in one place. I can copy those notes directly into my writing doc and start drafting. The calendar view has become essential for realistic planning. If I have three client calls scheduled on Thursday, I can see at a glance that I only have about 4 hours of deep work time. That means moving Friday’s deadline to Monday before I commit to an unrealistic timeline. It’s saved me from over-promising and under-delivering more times than I can count. (If you struggle with this, I wrote about time management strategies for freelancers that work alongside TickTick.) TickTick pricing There’s a free version. The paid plan costs $35.99/year. There’s also location-based pricing, as my current plan costs only

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TickTick Review: The Most User-Friendly Task Manager I’ve Ever Tested

Freelance writing is chaos by design. One day you’re juggling three client deadlines, the next you’re pitching five new ideas while trying to remember which client prefers AP style and which one wants Oxford commas.  Throw in invoicing reminders, research rabbit holes, and the constant battle to focus, and you’ve got a recipe for dropped balls. I’ve tried the usual suspects for managing my work, from Notion to Trello to various other productivity tools. Notion felt like building a spaceship when I just needed a car. Google Tasks was too basic. Trello worked until I had seven boards and couldn’t see the forest for the trees. Then I found TickTick, and something clicked. I’ve been using it for the past year to manage my freelance writing business, everything from client projects, article pipelines, invoicing reminders, and deep work sessions.  This review covers how I use it day-to-day, what works brilliantly, and what still frustrates me. Bottom line upfront: TickTick has become my command center for freelance writing. It’s the first task manager that’s flexible enough to handle my chaos without creating more of it. What is TickTick? TickTick is a task management and productivity app that combines to-do lists, calendar views, habit tracking, and focus tools in one place. It’s designed for people who need more power than Apple Reminders but don’t want the complexity of full project management software like Asana. The platform works across every device you own—iOS, Android, Mac, Windows, web, and even Apple Watch.  Screenshot from Apple Watch Browser extensions for Chrome, Firefox, and Safari let you quickly add tasks from any webpage without opening the full app. Everything syncs instantly, which matters when you’re capturing article ideas on your phone at 11 PM and need them on your laptop the next morning. For freelance content writers—especially those working with B2B SaaS clients—TickTick sits in a sweet spot. It’s structured enough to manage multiple clients and deadlines, but flexible enough to adapt to how you actually work. You’re not building databases (like Notion) or managing Gantt charts (like Monday.com).  Instead, you get to organize your tasks, block focus time, and get reminders when it’s time to invoice your clients, not that you need the reminder 😅. Most task apps make you choose between simplicity and power. TickTick gives you both—a clean interface that reveals more capabilities as you need them. You can start with basic to-do lists and gradually adopt features like smart lists, calendar view, and Pomodoro timers as your needs grow. TickTick consistently receives favorable ratings from independent reviewers, including a 4.6/5 score on G2,  4.7 stars out of 153K reviews on the Google Play Store, and 4.8/5 on the Apple Store. How I use TickTick as a freelance writer Here’s my setup, the one I open every morning before I start writing. One project per client When I sign a new client, I create a dedicated project or “List” in TickTick. Simple as that. Each project becomes a container for everything related to that client—article tasks, deadlines, notes, and reminders. Inside each client project, I add individual tasks for every article I need to write. So if I’m working with three clients and each needs four articles this month, I’ve got twelve discrete tasks spread across three projects. This keeps everything separated and prevents those “wait, which client was this for?” moments. Client notes at the top The first thing I do in any new client project is create a note pinned at the top. This is where I dump everything I need to remember about their style preferences: Do they want AP or Chicago style? What’s their preferred article length? Any topics to avoid? Which editor do I send drafts to? Having this visible at the top of the project means I don’t waste time digging through old emails or Slack messages. It’s just there when I need it. Client style guides and preferences are pinned at the top of each project to eliminate the need for constant email searches. Recurring invoicing reminders This might be my favorite feature, and it’s so simple it’s almost boring. I set a recurring reminder to invoice each client on the 30th of every month, the last working day, or whatever day I’ve set with the client. Ngl, before TickTick, I sometimes forgot to send my invoices on time.  Recurring invoicing reminders ensure freelancers never forget to bill clients on time. Calendar sync: Everything in one view I’ve connected both my Google Calendar and Apple Calendar to TickTick. The connection means I can see my tasks and calendar events in a single unified view. Client calls, article deadlines, co-working sessions, doctor appointments—all on the same calendar. Planning my day is easier now. I can see that I have a client call at 2 PM, an article due at 5 PM, and a gym session at 6 PM, and I can block time appropriately instead of overcommitting. Pomodoro timer for deep work Writing requires uninterrupted blocks of focus. TickTick has a built-in Pomodoro timer that I use for every writing session. I adjust it depending on the work, sometimes 30 minutes of focus with 5-minute breaks, sometimes 45 minutes with 10-minute breaks. When I start a writing session, I fire up the timer, put my phone face down, and write. The timer keeps me honest about focusing instead of “researching” (aka scrolling Twitter) for hours. The built-in Pomodoro timer helps maintain focus during writing sessions without switching apps. The timer tracks how many Pomodoros you complete per task, giving you data on how long different types of work actually take. Stats and analytics for accountability TickTick’s stats and analytics section shows me how much time I’m spending on each project and gives me productivity graphs over time. It’s like a fitness tracker for work. I check it weekly to see whether I’m balanced across clients, or if one client is eating up 60% of my time while paying only 30% of my work. This kind of

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Tired of Losing Money? Here’s How to Receive Dollars in Nigeria

If you’re trying to receive dollars in Nigeria as a freelancer, you’ve probably hit the usual roadblocks. Your local bank takes forever, the fees are all over the place, and don’t get me started on those exchange rates. That $2,000 writing project you just scored is starting to look like it’ll be around ₦2.7 million when it hits your naira account instead of ~₦3 million. Ouch. This scenario plays out daily for thousands of Nigerian freelance writers. You land international clients, deliver excellent work, but lose a chunk of your earnings to outdated payment systems and fees. Fortunately, you don’t have to go through all of these mental gymnastics thanks to apps and platforms that allow you to receive dollars in Nigeria. In this guide, I’ll break down some of the best platforms you can use to receive international payments as a Nigerian freelance writer. I’ve used some of these platforms myself, while others are “wisdom of the crowd.” Whether you’re getting paid through Upwork, working directly with international clients, or looking for the absolute lowest fees possible, there’s a solution here that’ll save you money and headaches. Best payment platforms to receive dollars in Nigeria at a glance Platform Best for Setup time Deposit fees Exchange rates Cleva Modern solution without bank bureaucracy Under 30 minutes 0.8% (max $15, min $1.5 ACH/$10 wire) Real-time competitive rates Deel Professional contracts & enterprise clients Longer setup Free to receive Poor naira rates Domiciliary account Traditional banking & large wire transfers Multiple bank visits Inconsistent (~$20 sometimes) Poor bank rates Grey Global nomads & multi-country work Quick 0.8% (min $2, max $10) 24/7 consistent rates Wise Long-term stability & reliability More documentation for USD 6.11 USD per wire/SWIFT Real mid-market rates Geegpay Reliability & excellent customer service Quick verification Checking pricing page for info Competitive Vban Lightning-fast transactions Minutes Not fully documented Better than competitors ($1=₦1507) Cleva Best for: Cleva is ideal for freelancers looking for a modern solution without the bureaucracy of traditional banks. Cleva is designed for African freelancers and remote workers who need to receive USD payments. Think of it as your bridge to the US banking system, where you get US account details that work with platforms like Upwork, Deel, and even crypto payments. The whole setup takes less than 30 minutes. You download the app, upload your ID, complete the KYC process, and you’ve got actual US bank account details that you can use anywhere.  It works if you’re getting paid through Upwork, receiving direct payments from international clients, or even getting USDC from crypto-savvy clients. In my experience, it took 2-3 working days from when the client sends the money for me to receive it in my Cleva account. You’ll typically receive an email and an in-app notification informing you that you’ve been credited. Converting the USD from there to your Naira account is easy. The app shows live exchange rates, and you can transfer to your local bank account instantly (and for free). Cleva also allows you to create a virtual USD card that you can use to pay for subscriptions and other services. If you’re earning $500-$5,000 monthly from platforms like Upwork or direct clients, and you want the convenience of instant conversion plus virtual cards for your subscriptions, Cleva hits the sweet spot. Cleva works well for writers just starting out with international clients, as the KYC process is straightforward and the fees are transparent. The crypto support also makes it future-proof, as it enables you to work with tech clients who prefer USDC payments. Skip Cleva if you’re receiving huge payments regularly (that $5,000 deposit limit will be annoying) or if you prefer established platforms with longer track records. Pros Cons Pricing/Charges Deposit fee: 0.8% with a maximum fee of $15. For ACH transfers, there’s a minimum chargeable fee of $1.5. Wire transfers have a minimum fee of $10.  You can view their pricing page to learn more about the charges involved in creating a virtual card and money transfers. If a client sends you $2000, you’d receive $1,985 on Cleva. Deel Best for: Freelancers who want bulletproof contracts, tax compliance, and professional credibility with enterprise clients. Deel is popularly known for helping companies hire from over 180 countries. It also has features that allow contractors to get paid by their clients. If you’re tired of getting stiffed by clients, dealing with messy payment arrangements, or having a client disappear after delivery, or arguing about scope creep, Deel eliminates those nightmares. The platform handles creating legally sound contracts, managing invoices, and ensuring timely payment. You can set up different payment structures (fixed rates, milestones, or hourly), and the whole process feels like working with a proper company rather than some random person you found on Twitter (never call it X). What I like about Deel is the protection it offers. When clients like Convertflow and Veed paid through Deel, the dollar payment was held in escrow until I delivered my drafts. The money was available, and I received it upon completing the work.  One heads up, though—their naira conversion rates aren’t great. You’re better off withdrawing to your domiciliary account and converting locally. But honestly, that’s a small price to pay for the peace of mind and professional setup they provide. Pros Cons Pricing/Charges: It’s free to receive payments on Deel as a freelance writer. Most of the cost falls on your client.  Withdrawing funds from Deel incurs processing fees, depending on the method used. However, Deel’s virtual card costs $5, and a physical card costs around $10, depending on your location. There are no transaction fees on the card for transactions made in USD. However, if you were to buy something in the United Kingdom or anywhere else that doesn’t accept USD, a 1.25% fee applies. Domiciliary Accounts Best for: Freelancers who prefer traditional banking and work with clients who are comfortable with wire transfers. A domiciliary account is basically a foreign currency account with your local Nigerian bank. It’s

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7 Best AI Market Research Tools to Uncover Customer Insights

You’re staring at a $50,000 quote for market research that’ll take 3 months to complete. Meanwhile, your competitor just launched a product that’s exactly what your customers wanted—and you’re left wondering how they knew. You finally catch up, but your “game-changing” insight is now common knowledge. Tough. What if you could understand your customers and their needs deeply, in less time and for a fraction of the cost? You can with AI market research tools. These tools can analyze consumer behavior, track competitor moves, show customer sentiment, and uncover market trends in real-time. In this guide, I’ll share 7 of the best AI market research tools you can use today to get quick, actionable customer insights without breaking the bank. You’ll learn which tools excel at different types of research, how to choose the right one for your needs, and what to expect from each tool. What are the best AI tools for market research? Best market research tool for AI-powered research questions Perplexity Perplexity is an AI-powered search and research assistant that combines real-time web browsing with conversational answers backed by citations. It synthesizes information from multiple credible sources, making it easier for a market researcher to quickly find, verify, and summarize valuable insights. You can ask complex, multi-step questions, filter results by source type (e.g., academic papers, Reddit, news), and organize findings into collaborative “Spaces.”  Standout features Pros Cons Perplexity pricing There’s a free but limited version. The paid version starts at $20/month with unlimited searches and advanced AI models. Best AI market research tool for survey analysis Quantilope Image source Quantilope is a market insights AI platform that turns survey responses into actionable insights. With Quantilope, you no longer have to manually analyze hundreds of responses about why users aren’t upgrading or converting, as the platform identifies patterns and delivers clear recommendations. Whether you’re exploring brand health, segmenting audiences, testing pricing strategies, or validating product concepts, Quantilope helps you do it fast and with confidence. Its platform is built for researchers of all levels, integrating advanced analytics with a smooth, guided workflow to simplify complex studies. Standout features Pros Cons Quantilope pricing Custom pricing based on survey volume and the features you need. Best market research AI tool for reliable consumer insight GWI Spark GWI Spark is an AI-powered consumer research platform that provides instant access to data representing nearly 3 billion people across 53 global markets, with a focus on spotting emerging market trends before they become mainstream. It analyzes global consumer behavior data to help you identify changing customer preferences, industry adoption patterns, and new market opportunities through an intuitive AI assistant interface. Slow reaction to changes in market dynamics goes out the window with a tool like GWI Spark. Now, you get early signals about consumer preferences, which industries are adopting new technologies, and which customer segments are growing fastest—all of which can inform your marketing strategy. Standout features Pros Cons CWI Spark pricing There’s a free plan that lets you use up to 20 prompts and create unlimited decks with CWI Canvas. The paid plan starts at $150/user. 📝 Need content that positions your company as the go-to expert in your space? I write research-heavy guides like this one that drive qualified leads. Best AI market research tool for customer interview analysis Otter.ai + Gen AI tools like Claude/ChatGPT Otter.ai is an AI meeting assistant that automatically records, transcribes, and summarizes meetings, making it easier to capture insights without manually taking notes.  It’s useful in the market research process because it allows you to focus on the conversation—whether it’s a client interview, focus group, or internal strategy session—while handling accurate transcription, organizing action items, and providing searchable records for later analysis.  Otter.ai integrates with tools like Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams, and has AI features that let you query past meetings for specific details. You can combine Otter.ai with other Generative AI tools like Claude or ChatGPT to gain even more insights. You can analyze call transcripts to surface consumer sentiment, identify patterns, pain points, and feature requests across dozens of conversations. The combination also allows you to scale qualitative research without hiring expensive analysts or spending weeks manually reviewing interview notes. Standout features Pros Cons Otter.ai Pricing There’s a free but limited basic plan. The paid tier starts from $16.99/month and comes with AI technology workflows, integrations, and unlimited storage. Other great meeting assistant options are Fireflies, Granola, and Speak AI. Best AI market research tool for website behavior analysis Hotjar Image source Hotjar is a behavior analytics and user feedback platform that provides Product Experience Insights showing how users behave and what they feel strongly about on your website or app. It analyzes how visitors use your business website and product through heatmaps, session recordings, and feedback tools. Rather than guessing why your trial signup rate is low or why customers abandon your pricing page, you can pinpoint where prospects get confused, which features they ignore, and what drives them to convert or leave.  Hotjar helps you understand user behavior patterns that surveys and standard analytics can’t capture. Standout features Pros Cons Hotjar pricing Free plan with 35 daily sessions. The paid plans start at $32/month for 100 daily sessions. Best market research AI tool for social media monitoring Brandwatch Image source Brandwatch Consumer Intelligence is an AI-powered social listening platform that empowers over 5,000 companies to understand and engage with customers at the speed of social media through data from over 100 million social and online sources. It monitors millions of social media conversations across platforms like X (formerly Twitter), LinkedIn, Reddit, and industry forums to identify what your target market is saying about their problems, your competitors, and emerging needs.  This means you capture authentic, unfiltered discussions happening in real-time across the social web, without waiting for customers to complain directly or submit feedback through formal channels. For you, this means discovering customer pain points before they become widespread complaints, spotting competitive threats before they impact your

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The Best Tools for B2B Content Writers to Work Faster and Better

Imagine if all Matthew Vaughn had to create the Kingsman series was a decade-old, glitchy camcorder. No amount of talent or skill would make those movies look half as good as the blockbuster films that collectively grossed nearly $1 billion worldwide. The point? Tools maketh a man. You can have the best ideas in the world, but without the right tools, your content won’t hit as hard as it should. After years of working as a B2B content writer, I’ve tested a ridiculous number of tools. Some were useful, others just added clutter. But a few have become part of my workflow because they help me write faster, cut down editing time, and stay organized without being overwhelmed. So, if you’re serious about improving your writing and handling your projects, you need the right tools. Here are the tools for content writers that made the biggest difference for me and how they can do the same for you. Google Docs Best for: Writers who need a simple, no-fuss writing tool that syncs across devices. As a B2B freelance content writer, I need a writing tool that allows me to draft, edit, and collaborate with clients effortlessly. Google Docs is my go-to writing platform because it combines the simplicity of a word processor (like Microsoft Word) with the flexibility of real-time collaboration.  Whether I’m fleshing out a content idea or writing a blog post, Google Docs helps me keep everything organized and easily accessible from anywhere.  Oh look, I’m writing this post in a Google Doc. But beyond being a “cloud-based Microsoft Word alternative,” Google Docs has many cool features that make my workflow smoother.  For starters, typing “doc.new” fires up a new doc on my browser.  I sometimes use the voice typing feature to get ideas down quickly without worrying about structure. I also dictate ideas straight to the doc when my hands are tired. It’s surprisingly accurate and a great way to beat writer’s block. I like the new “Document tabs” section that allows me to create multiple tabs. Now, I can dump all my research into a single doc without switching tabs. I can have my content brief on one tab while writing my draft on another.  Another feature I love is the commenting and suggesting mode. I work remotely, so it’s a lifesaver for collaborating with editors and clients. Instead of dealing with messy email chains, I simply tag stakeholders in the document, and they can leave feedback directly in the text. This eliminates confusion and speeds up the revision process. Call me vain, but I collect the nice comments editors leave when I deliver high-quality content, like the one below. Underrated Way To Use Google Docs With the “WordPress for Google Docs” add-on, you can draft blog posts in Docs and publish them directly to your site — no copy-pasting required. To install Add-ons on your Google Doc, click Extensions at the top menu → Add-ons → Get add-ons. Use the search bar to look for the add-on you want. In this case, I’m looking for the WordPress add-on. When you click “Install,” you’ll be prompted to log into your WordPress account and add your WordPress Site to Google Docs. Once you’ve logged in, you can choose the type of post you’re creating in your doc, which populates automatically on WordPress. Easy-peasy. Features Pricing I like to think of Google Docs as a free tool (and I think most people do). You can create unlimited documents with 15GB of storage shared across Google Drive. Google Docs is also part of Google Workspace, a paid subscription service. The lowest tier is the Business Starter plan, which costs $6.30/month. This comes with business-grade security, additional storage, and admin controls. MarketMuse Best for: B2B writers who want to create high-ranking SEO content and do content optimization without spending hours second-guessing strategy. You already know the struggle of balancing writing for search engines and humans. On the one hand, you must include keywords so crawlers understand your site. However, you also need to write clearly so that the readers can understand your blog post. MarketMuse can help. MarketMuse helps you write SEO-optimized content by analyzing competitors and suggesting keywords, topics, and content gaps. Think of it as an AI-powered research assistant that makes sure your articles rank. Here are some ways I use MarketMuse to optimize my writing. I use MarketMuse to ensure my drafts are optimized for search engines before submission. Once I finish a draft, I paste it into MarketMuse’s Optimize tool. It gives me a content score compared to competitors, then suggests missing terms, semantic keywords, and structural improvements to close the gap. This ensures my work isn’t just well-written but also well-positioned to rank. Sometimes, I use the SERP X-Ray feature to analyze the top-ranking pages for a specific keyword. It’s not exactly the greatest tool for keyword research, but it shows content gaps my competitors missed, which means I can fill those gaps and give my piece an edge. Underrated Way to Use MarketMuse MarketMuse doesn’t just help you write better content. It helps you charge more for it. Before working with a new client, you can: This strategy makes you stand out from other freelance writers and justifies your higher rates. Instead of just saying, “I can write an SEO-friendly blog post,” You say: “I analyzed your content gaps using MarketMuse and see a clear opportunity to rank for [keyword]. If we optimize your existing posts and add fresh content, you’ll rank higher on the search engine results page and attract more traffic. I can build that content strategy for you.” Boom. Clients see you as a strategist who understands content marketing, not just a freelance writer, and are happy to pay more. Features Pricing The free plan lets you make up to 10 queries each month. Queries count for any search you make in the Research and Optimize tab. The paid plans start with the Optimize Plan, which costs $99/month. Grammarly Best for: Catching

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