Everyone has their methods. I prefer a secondary. To each is own.
Yes, that is true, you can certainly do whatever you want to your beer and I am sure that your beer tastes fine.
However, this is a newbe asking for advice, and giving dated advice that has be debunked multiple times and that can be argued against by logical reasoning, is not a nice thing to do. Let´s give some examples why secondary is not a good idea.
1. The yeast autolysis thing just does not happen any more. Back in the days, yeast was ****** and half dead, today this is just not happening within the normal primary timeframe. Everything up to multiple months in primary does not display autolysis.
3. The beer does not get clearer through secondary. If the stuff settles out during additional days in secondary, this stuff will also settle out in primary, given the same time.
2. You will introduce oxygen during the proces of transfering and this will degrade your beer. You might be very careful and skillfull and the amount of oxygen might be little, but this means you need to have expensive equipment and you need to know what you are doing. And even if this all is the case, you will still introduce oxygen and it will still degrade your beer. For nothing.
3. You are removing the yeast cake and therefore also loose valuable time during which the yeast actually could clean up some of the bad stuff they created during active fermentation. This clean up phase is important, especially when fermentation conditions were not as perfect as they should be. The yeast will sort this out up to a certain degree, if given time to do so. If you remove it from the yeast cake, it cannot do this cleaning up.
3. You risk contamination. New vessel + transfer + oxygen = Heeellooooo bacteria!
4. You make stuff unnecessarily complicated, especially for beginners, this is really not good.
5. More steps = More sources of possible failures
6. You need more vessels.
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I am sure there is more, but this is what just came to my mind.