Johan Jacob. Instead of me writing a review because I havn't enrolled or paid any money to WorldClassedge I found Johnans review to be excellent and answered many of the questions I had. I did se... See more
Companies on Trustpilot aren't allowed to offer incentives or pay to hide reviews.
See what reviewers are saying
These guys simply know what they are doing. I’ve been into trading since several years now and I decided to learn from Andrea and his team. Been constantly profitable ever since. You simply can’t comp... See more
I was recommended Worldclassedge last year and I’m very glad I decided to give it a try. Over the past 3 years, I had joined different programs that were mostly about marketing and not much real value... See more
For years I jumped between stocks and forex with no real consistency. Some weeks I made money, but mostly I lost it back. What I was missing was structure. At WCE, I learned to prepare before the mark... See more
Hasn’t replied to negative reviews
Great mentorship
Great mentorship! Nothing more to add to that. I bought several so called "coachings" and unfortunately it took me some years to realize that most of them don't even know what they are doing - It's 99% marketing. Through the approaches the guys teached here I finally made it to be constantly profitabel the last 12 months. Definitely worth it, especially when you are already into trading for quite some time.
Well-Intentioned Course That Falls Short on Delivery and Mentorship
I signed up for the Elite Membership with Worldclassedge, which cost me around $4,000. This review is not to discredit the founders Andrea or Fabio — I genuinely respect their efforts and intentions. But I want to share my experience honestly for others considering this course.
The program is marketed heavily, especially around Patrick Nill — a Robbin’s Cup champion — along with his mentor Tom and his team, which includes Serge and Jonathan. The promotion promises hands-on guidance, live sessions, psychology testing, and access to seasoned professionals. It sounded like the full package, especially for beginners. But once inside, the experience didn’t fully align with those expectations.
The technical content is pre-recorded and pretty decent overall, especially if you're looking for a framework similar to Patrick’s trading style. However, Patrick wasn’t very present in the interactive elements of the course. Most sessions are handled by Jonathan, who is a capable and clear communicator. That said, Jonathan is a swing trader using TradingView, while Patrick uses Sierra Charts and Serge uses ATAS. As a beginner, it became confusing to adapt to different tools without clear guidance. Each mentor’s method varies, and there’s no unified direction on which platform to focus on or what chart settings to use. Some use footprint charts, others focus on swings — we were left to figure it out ourselves.
The psychology component was another area I had high hopes for. It's presented as a unique strength of the program, led by Tom (Patrick’s mentor). I took the personality test and had concerns about the results, which were auto-generated. I reached out hoping to speak to the TTT Team for clarification. Instead, I was sent a link to retake the test. When the results came back similar, I followed up again — but never heard back. While Tom is positioned as someone who would personally analyze these results, there’s no one-on-one engagement — just a general pre-recorded video.
Live sessions were the biggest gap. To be clear — I wasn’t expecting trading signals. I wanted to learn how professionals prepare, enter, and manage trades in real time. What we got were occasional pre-market sessions and a few replay reviews, with limited visibility into real decision-making under market conditions. They mention “regulatory” concerns as the reason they don’t trade live — which I understand to a point — but there are workarounds. Demo accounts, anonymized walkthroughs, or even NDAs could’ve been considered. It’s unclear what's truly stopping them, which leaves you questioning whether it’s a compliance issue or just a gap in delivery.
The Discord group lacked engagement, largely due to the absence of active participation from the team. After the live sessions, things went quiet. There wasn’t any ongoing interaction, day-to-day trade discussions, or opportunities to ask questions. The community didn’t feel alive or supportive — which is something you’d expect from a premium mentorship program.
I’m not saying the course was all bad. The team is knowledgeable and has good intentions. But for $4,000, I expected more structured mentoring, clearer access to the main figures, and a tighter learning experience. Instead, I often felt like I was navigating things on my own — figuring out platforms, chasing support, and missing the direct guidance I thought I had signed up for.
Looking back, I feel like a couple of books — such as Johannes Forthmann’s (which teaches a style similar to Patrick’s) and Jared Tendler’s on trading psychology — would’ve given me more clarity and direction. If you’re looking for real mentorship and hands-on learning, this may not be the right course for you. I really wanted this to work, but for me, the value just didn’t justify the price.
Good Webinar
First Webinar was okay second was really good. Now I’m confused as the price tags aren’t visible like they were before (I liked that it was a clear price structure and you knew what you get).
The Trustpilot Experience
Anyone can write a Trustpilot review. People who write reviews have ownership to edit or delete them at any time, and they’ll be displayed as long as an account is active.
Companies can ask for reviews via automatic invitations. Labeled Verified, they’re about genuine experiences.
Learn more about other kinds of reviews.
We use dedicated people and clever technology to safeguard our platform. Find out how we combat fake reviews.
Learn about Trustpilot’s review process.
Here are 8 tips for writing great reviews.
Verification can help ensure real people are writing the reviews you read on Trustpilot.
Offering incentives for reviews or asking for them selectively can bias the TrustScore, which goes against our guidelines.








