Sorry, I believe you are incorrect.
Take the Milky Way Galaxy, for example. On a clear night,
with the unaided eye, almost everything you see is within the Milky Way Galaxy. A few planets might be seen and identified, but there are 200 Billion + stars (just like our Sun) in the Milky Way Galaxy. Each of those stars can have from 0 to 10 (or more) planets with their associated moons orbiting around them. So there are far more planets than stars out there.
The problem is that we cannot see all of those planets. Their suns blind us when we look at them using high power optical equipment. Planets do not "shine", only stars do that. So, it is similar to looking into a car's headlights at night. The headlights blind you and you are unable to see anything around the car, or behind the headlights of the car for that reason.
Now, beyond our Milky Way Galaxy there are tens of thousands of other galaxies. Each one of those could have billions of stars in them. And, you might have guessed it, each of those stars can have from 0 to 10 (or more) planets with their associated moons orbiting around them also.
That is lots and lots of stars and an even larger number of planets.
Regards,
Zah