In my experience with ATAS, the platform has a clear niche: it’s primarily geared toward order flow and volume analysis for futures, stocks, and cryptocurrencies. As someone who’s relied on granular market data for my trading, I found ATAS particularly useful when focusing on futures or cryptocurrency markets—especially since the crypto tools are available for free on several major exchanges like Binance and Bybit. Traditional forex (currencies), however, is not directly listed among the supported instruments, which is important if, like me, you’re primarily interested in spot forex pairs. When I trialed the platform, I noticed that stocks and futures access was available, but only through a Windows desktop environment and, notably, these features were not unlocked in the free version—it was limited strictly to crypto analysis. In contrast to more generalized brokers or platforms that show a broad range of CFDs on indices or commodities, ATAS is more specialized, prioritizing in-depth data for order-driven traders. For me, the absence of any valid regulatory oversight and ATAS’s limited direct market coverage made me cautious. I would not consider it for full-service multi-asset trading, but for detailed analysis in crypto and futures, it offers robust tools. Still, I advise staying conservative and being aware of its limitations, particularly if regulation and asset diversity are top priorities for your trading style.