First, for the amount of things you have going on in there, that's a good mix. You can hear everything, even the clean guitar never really disappears.
For the guitars, you need more mids, less of the crispy top end. The white noise does come through. Some of that may be the particular pedal, as many of them use a high pass/low pass arrangement with the tone knob as a blender like the Big Muff and DS-1. Using
a Fulldrive2, TS9, SD-1 style pedal will probably get you a more ampish sound; maybe one scoopy guitar and one middy guitar and you blend the two in the mix.
Play the guitars through amps and mic the amps. That should get the mids and highs back into balance. If you have to go direct, maybe a 15 or 30 band EQ set like the Celestion or Eminence speaker EQ curves, but tube amps are the only thing that play, feel, and sound like tube amps.
Cut down on the number of guitar tracks to say two per individual part (e.g. two distorted rhythm guitars, two distorted lead guitars), and cut the gain on the rhythm tracks. That should make the guitars clearer and punchier. Try less reverb/ delay.
Turn up the distorted rhythm guitars a bit. When you're doing the clean to dirty thing, the dirty needs to have more kick than the clean. Think "Smells Like Teen Spirit." And give the drums some more oomf, especially the kick drum.
All in my humble opinion, HTH!