Method · I Ching

The I Ching, cast by coins. Read by AI.

Hold one question. Toss the coins six times to build a hexagram, line by line. Get a written reading of the figure, its changing lines, and where they point.

What it is

Six lines, one moment

The I Ching, or Book of Changes, is one of China's oldest oracles — three thousand years of asking how a situation is built and where it's headed. Six lines stack into a hexagram, each one solid or broken, and together they name the shape of a moment.

On Fatelore the toss is genuinely random — no arranged outcomes. The AI reads the hexagram and any changing lines in light of classical commentary, then turns it toward the question you actually asked.

How a reading works

Three steps

1

Frame the question

One sentence is enough. The I Ching answers a situation better than a plain yes or no.

2

Toss six times

Each toss sets one line, bottom to top. Some lines are changing — those matter most.

3

Read the hexagram

The AI reads the figure and its changes — the situation now, the pressure inside it, and the way it's moving.

Best for

Questions the I Ching reads well

  • Situations in motion — what's really going on, and which way it's turning.
  • Timing — whether to act now or let things ripen.
  • How to carry yourself — the wiser posture for this moment.
  • Crossroads where your attitude matters more than the option you pick.
Ready when you are

Have a question? Consult the Changes.

New users start with 20 credits — enough for a full reading.