GME Solid V: The Phantom Structure — Process Over NoiseGameStop Corp. Class ABATS:GMEHotsauceShoTYME Personal Preface: Process and Patience At some point in trading, the noise becomes overwhelming. You realize both price and fake financial gurus ("FURUs") are trying to lead you — and if you let them, they will lead you straight into financial oblivion. Modern markets are heavily influenced by algorithms designed to exploit emotion and reaction. Meanwhile many FURUs amplify the noise because their goal is selling courses, subscriptions, or Discord memberships. What traders actually need is something very different: A community and a process that emphasize patience, structure, and disciplined thinking. When you trust your process, the noise fades. It doesn’t disappear — but it stops influencing your decisions. An important realization follows: A process is not immutable. It evolves. Markets evolve. The algorithms interacting with those markets evolve. Your tools and frameworks must evolve with them. When you truly trust your process, you begin to enjoy refining it. You experiment. You test ideas. You explore tools others overlook. Eventually you develop ways of seeing structure that bring clarity — even when others disagree with the conclusion. And that clarity is what matters. Process vs Patience Process is actually the easy part. Patience is much harder. Especially when FURUs constantly shout predictions like: • "GME is going to $17." • "GME is going to $33." Point & Figure charts helped me develop patience because they remove the constant distraction of time and focus purely on price structure and participation. The clarity this provides can be surprising. Markets love forming large structures — and within those structures they form smaller ones. These nested structures can fake traders out repeatedly. Without patience, traders react to the smaller moves and lose sight of the larger framework. Macro Structure on GME This chart highlights how clear the structure becomes when you step back. The upper panel shows the Point & Figure structure, which removes time and emphasizes price movement and participation. The lower panel shows the monthly candle structure for additional context. Several structural elements stand out. 1. Overhead Supply The red zone represents persistent supply that has capped multiple advances since the 2021 impulse move. Point & Figure makes this structure very clear — repeated columns failing to expand through the same region. 2. Demand Structure The green zone highlights an area where responsive buyers have repeatedly defended price. Each test of this region has produced a reaction higher. This behavior suggests demand absorption, but not yet decisive markup. 3. Structural Compression The descending trendline shows how supply continues pressing downward toward demand. At some point these forces intersect. Markets do not remain in compression forever. 4. Structure Within Structure Inside the larger macro structure, GME continues forming smaller structures that repeatedly: • test demand • test supply • produce false breakouts Without understanding the larger framework, traders can easily get chopped up reacting to these smaller moves. Takeaway The macro structure here is actually quite clear. GME is trading inside a large compression regime defined by: • persistent overhead supply • responsive demand support • progressively tightening structure Environments like this tend to produce noise, fakeouts, and emotional trading decisions. But when viewed through the lens of process and patience, the structure becomes much easier to understand. And that clarity is the real advantage.