 They had to trade Vinnie, what would you trade in non-US market hours? Forex features or still the main indices? Really for me, whatever's moving in non-US market hours. So I have a rule of thumb. Let me show you guys this. If you're in our e-mini main chat and you want to look at our sessions, exclamation mark sessions and then for the overnight sessions too or session two. You can know about the daytime ones, but after hours here is here are the things you need to think about. You're going to be trading the non-US market hours, okay? Here's what I say. I do not recommend for new traders to trade the Asian-European session US overnight. Now there's a lot of reasons for that. Tends to be a new trader usually has a smaller account whatnot, but again up to you if you want the risk and yada yada my suggestions are don't. But if you want to watch it, you want to sim it, you want to practice it, that's fine. Get good at it. But here are some scenarios where you might want to after hours. Here's the scenarios. Bank of Japan reporting, okay? That's a Red Star news event. Bank of Japan in the off hours, that's a good one. Something that gives some extra volatility in the off hours is going to be good for it. Or any type of macro event, market moving news events, okay? Typically another thing. Volatility is naturally, you know, it comes in the Asian close. So if it's at the close or the European open, okay? There's like a little time window there, that's why I squared those up here at the 3 a.m. and 6 a.m. Eastern time. Those opens and closes might be a spot, but in general you do really want to roll through the whole day unless there are again market impacting news events where you're going to get that extra volatility because of news. In general, that's my suggestion around dealing with non-U.S.