One Major Arcana card. Drawn at random. A personalized reading written for today, in this moment, for you. New pull tomorrow.
Tap the card or button to draw.
A daily card pull isn't divination. It's a mirror. Every morning you draw one Major Arcana card and read what it says about the day — not as a prediction, but as a frame. The card is asking you to look at something you might have skipped.
The cards repeat. That's part of the practice. When the same card shows up three times in two weeks, it's not coincidence — it's the pattern asking for your attention. The Tower keeps showing up because something in your life IS the tower. Death keeps showing up because something needs to end. The Lovers keeps showing up because you have a choice you've been avoiding.
Most tarot apps are noisy. Pull twelve cards. Get four advertisers. See six paywalls. This isn't that. One card. One reading. Come back tomorrow. The constraint is the point.
Once per day. The pull resets at midnight in your local timezone. Coming back tomorrow gives you a new card with a fresh reading.
A daily pull is a practice, not a slot machine. The constraint makes the reading land. If you pulled five cards in five minutes, none of them would mean anything. One card. One day. One reading.
Yes — there's a button at the bottom of the result screen. We don't gate this. But notice the impulse: if you didn't like the card, sit with it before re-drawing. The card you wanted to leave behind is often the one that has something to tell you.
Each pull triggers a real-time AI generation that writes a 200-word reading in Lore's voice — atmospheric, specific, cinematic. It's not a paragraph from a database. It's written for this card, on this day.
Lore is the deeper practice. Daily pulls there integrate with your archetype, your Sage chat history, and cinematic portraits of how the cards show up in your life. The web pull is fully free and standalone.