The internets make it pretty confusing with Valve Wizard, Aiken and Kevin O'connor telling you to only use star grounding.
Their not telling you to use star grounding. (I don't know about what Aiken says and Merlin does have a short/small section/blurb in his grounding page but he says in it you'd have to arrange the chassis/PT, OT, choke/ tubes very differently then is the norm.)
KOC and Merlin do have ground stars (KOC calls it galactic grounding, these stars make up the galaxy)
BUT each star is arranged around a single B+ filter cap that's feeding the tube(s) and their components. The B+ filter cap and the components it feeds/supplies, get grounded together with the filter cap being as close as possible to the circuitry it feeds/supplies. This way the ground/B+ wires are short and the current flow in them will not disturb other circuits which can/would cause hum. Each ground star is then daisy chained to the next ground star.
True star grounding has ground stars
BUT each stars ground runs a ground wire back to 1 chassis ground point. So the sensitive preamp grounds are tired to the dirty high current power amp grounds.
Their similar but they are different.
Doug's grounding separates the power section from the preamp section, power section gets grounded at a PT bolt and the preamp gets grounded at the input jacks. Doug also keeps the B+ filter caps close to the circuitry they feed. This works great.
There's 4 main things;
1. The power section has large and dirty ground current that if connected to the preamp ground can/will modulate the preamps ground and cause hum, separate them. (Either like Doug or like KOC and Merlin.)
2. Keep the B+ filter caps close to their circuitry.
3. Ground the B+ filter cap and only the circuitry it feeds together.
4. Try to use as few chassis ground ground connections (random grounding) as possible.