lol, normally the longer you learn and trade, the more you understand you don't need a bunch of fancy indicators, only a few. First, you should get used to price action, volume, S/R, 2 or 3 charts with different tf, e.g. M1, M5, M15 where M5 is the trading tf (don't confuse with switching tfs). Better avoid EURUSD, CHF-pairs and gold - noobs only look for low spreads or pairs everyone trades and loose. Many pros only trade one or two crosses or indices. GBP-pairs are good for beginners and not as boring as EURUSD
also look for correlations.
Indis are good when you know what style you want to trade and the indis fits it and have much synergy to it. Don't believe more is best. Totally underestimated by beginners is money management - here is often the key why 90% of beginners loose. Also beginners take for everything an indicator, even for TL, S/R or whatever should made manually - I never saw or heard a pro uses indis for that. The result is they think TLs and S/R don't work and are frustrated. Of course, search something at the wrong place and you must be frustrated. This needs experience - there can be found many S/R or TLs on the chart, but you need only the important ones and after a while often you see them already with your eyes - what keeps the charts even cleaner to focus on price action.
There are many kinds of trading, but the more experienced the traders are, the more similarities you can find - they don't believe everything they hear, just pick the cherries which make sense in their trading plan, they don't switch markets and tfs and methodologies and are disciplined. Trading is also personality development (ok, martial arts as well), mentally hard work, avoid bad habits, make a check list and so on. Sport and good food are also important. There is no beginners league in trading, you only have the Champions League, so be prepared when you enter the pit.
Find your own way, trading is fun and markets are easy to read - after 10.000 hours.