Preston, there's one more basic thing to check.
A couple years ago I had the chance to go on an out of state hunt for elk. I practiced, concentrated, and was shooting the best of my life. I was READY!
On the second day back in camp, I took a few easy 20 yards shots at a bag target. My excellent shooting was gone, and arrow flight was squirrely and unpredictable. The nocks of the arrows were corkscrewing in a way I had never seen instead of spinning perfectly like normal. Could it be the elevation??? Had my bow's tiller changed??? Was it gremlins???
I was flummoxed, and shot and shot trying to figure things out. Finally, by switching point weight by going to the other broadheads I had, things were enough better that I felt I could still go hunting, but my confidence had taken a serious hit.
After the trip when I returned home, I went out shooting and the corkscrewing was worse again with my Judo points. I checked my nock points, looked at the brace height... OH NO!!!
It was visually obvious that it was too low, and when I measured, it was over an below my normal setting. How could I have missed it?
I had "wisely" replaced my string a month before the trip for safety, and shot the heck out of it while my practice was going so well. Had a little stretch early, then believed it had stabilized fully.
When I wound it back where it belonged, arrow flight was perfect again, and I was shooting very well.
Rookie mistake after 20+ years behind the bow, but I had to think the 1,200 mile trip, short nights of fitful sleep, and life at 9,000 ft for this Flatlander kept me from normal clarity. DUH!
This is likely not you problem, but thought the story was worth telling to make sure no one else made the same, simple mistake!
Good luck getting things squared away...