About
Why another tarot app?
Because the ones out there are either oracles of fate — promising what will happen — or casual games with no depth at all. What was missing was a place where a reading is an invitation to reflect, not a verdict.
What it is
You ask a question. You pick a card. You get one of four answers — Yes, No, Maybe, or Needs Clarity — along with a short reading and a piece of advice. If you want to go deeper, Aurora, a virtual tarot reader with 15 years of "experience," opens a private conversation where you can draw more cards, ask for affirmations, or simply think out loud.
What it is NOT
- Not a substitute for a therapist, doctor, lawyer, or financial advisor.
- Does not predict death, tragedy, or other people's actions as fixed fate.
- No shallow new-age clichés — Aurora was trained to speak plainly.
- Doesn't require signup. No email, no password, no personal data.
Responsibility
The traditional card The Devil was reframed as The Chains — the same symbol of attachment and pattern, without the heavy imagery of the original. Sensitive questions (about self-harm, abuse, serious illness) trigger a warning in the input and redirect to professionals (US: 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline; UK & ROI: Samaritans 116 123; Brazil: CVV 188).
Who made it
A team of one (me), in love with design and well-crafted code. Want to talk? [email protected].