The recent discovery of 27 dual-sun planet candidates by astronomers at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) is a groundbreaking development in exoplanet research. This technique, known as apsidal precession, has revealed a structural gap in how astronomy has been counting planets for decades. The transit method, the dominant detection tool, is geometrically restricted and has only found planets with nearly coplanar orbits. However, apsidal precession can detect planets regardless of their orbital alignment, providing a more comprehensive view of the galaxy's planetary population. This technique has the potential to uncover thousands or even tens of thousands of additional circumbinary planet candidates, as demonstrated by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's ongoing Legacy Survey of Space and Time. The discovery raises intriguing questions about the habitability of circumbinary systems and the possibility of life beyond single-star systems. As the field of exoplanet research continues to evolve, the use of apsidal precession as a large-scale planetary search tool will undoubtedly lead to further exciting discoveries and a deeper understanding of the universe.