INDICATOR

Silver Bullet by FX Replay

Custom

ICT Silver Bullet Indicator – FX Replay Guide

The ICT Silver Bullet Indicator in FX Replay is designed to highlight three specific one-hour time windows tied to potential Fair Value Gaps (FVGs) and liquidity events. These windows are ideal for intraday traders looking to capitalize on algorithmic market behavior during known high-probability zones.

Silver Bullet Windows (NY Time)

  • London Open: 3:00 AM – 4:00 AM
  • NY AM Session: 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM
  • NY PM Session: 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM

These are automatically marked on your chart using the Silver Bullet feature within FX Replay’s Session Indicator.

How to Use It in FX Replay

Add the Indicator:

  • Open the Indicators panel
  • Search for “Session Indicator by FX Replay” or “Silver Bullet”
  • Apply it to your chart — boxes or highlights will appear for the three target time windows

Spot Fair Value Gaps (FVGs):

  • During each highlighted window, look for FVG formations (imbalanced price areas where price may return before expanding)
  • Focus on setups that align with market structure shifts, displacement candles, or liquidity runs

Plan Your Entry/Exit:

  • Example: During the 10–11 AM window, price reenters a bullish FVG → Watch for a clean entry near the gap with a target at a liquidity pool (equal highs/lows, previous day high/low, etc.)
  • Manage stop-loss placement based on your structure (e.g., swing low behind FVG)

Adjust Session Preferences:

  • Click the gear icon on the indicator to fine-tune session visibility or change the styling for better visual tracking

Backtest & Optimize

  • Use FX Replay’s session-based playback to isolate only Silver Bullet windows
  • Test how FVG + Silver Bullet + liquidity-based confluence performs on your chosen pair
  • Optimize your session settings or chart timeframe (use 1M or 5M) for precision entries

Pro Tip

In FX Replay, the Silver Bullet windows are best used as timing filters — combine them with ICT concepts like internal range liquidity, breaker blocks, and displacement to form high-confidence setups. These aren’t random windows; they’re algorithmically driven behavior zones.