Here’s the uncomfortable truth: you don’t need more inputs—you need better filtering.
Imagine trying to drive while looking at five different GPS systems. Each one reduces your ability to act confidently. That’s what your chart becomes when overloaded.
The industry reinforces this mistake. Educators promote indicators over interpretation.
Instead of asking “What else can I add?”, they ask “What can I remove?”.
The tool doesn’t give you an edge by itself. It supports clarity, not complexity.
The Clarity Compression Effect explains why this works. When noise is removed, signal becomes obvious.
This reduces the reaction gap—the delay between seeing click here and acting. And in trading, delay is expensive.
And over time, the difference becomes obvious. Not dramatically—but consistently.
Because in trading, and less often becomes more.