One thing to consider. The nutriends plants need fall into two basic groups macro and trace. That is a bit of an over simplification but valid. The macros are the NPK - Nitrogen, Phosphorus and Potasium. Pretty much everything else falls into the other grouping. And this is why I like using the Tropica products. They now make two different ferts. The first Is a more comprehensive one which contains, it all. The second contains mostly the trace stuff.
A stocked tank can often provide all of the macros. For example, the nitrrogen comes from ammonia or nitrate. Most of the trace stuff tends to come in with our water. What ferts. one should use is a function of the plant load and the fish load. If you have a lightly stocked tank, you may need the comprehensive. But the same plant load with many more fish may mean that you only need the trace mix, if it needs anything.
On the other hand the type and number of plants one has also matters. The more of them one has, and the more demanding they are, then the more you may need the comprehensive no matter what your stocking level.
I keep both types of the Tropica fertilizers. It can take a little time to decide what and how much you need in any given tank. But once you get it basically dialed in, it is pretty easy. The only thing I rarely see mentioned in planted tank discusions is the need to modify the dosing of fertilizer as plants grow and then when you finally have a jungle and have to do a major prune. Then you may want to reduce you fertilizing.
I can also confess to the following. I have kept clown loaches for over 20 years. They started out in smaller tanks and then moved into a 75 planted. In that tank I had an outbreak of red algae that lasted for almost 18 years. It was that long because from that 75 they were moved to a 150 and the algae came along. Nothing I did knocked it back. That is until about a year ago. I stopped being as thick as a brick and finally realized those clowns were my macro ferts and I was dosing more on top of that. I stopped using the Macros and now only use the trace mix. I am now winning the algae war.
My biggest issue is that when anubias grow really tall, they get very close to the light and algae just loves that imbalance.