Look up a single card, or lay out an entire spread.
Use Quick Lookup if you already did a reading and just want to remember what one card meant. Use Full Spread to fill in an entire spread at once and get a reading that connects every card into one story.
An upright card is read at face value — its core meaning applies directly. A reversed card (drawn upside down) usually points to that same energy showing up blocked, delayed, turned inward, or exaggerated. Some readers treat reversals as a full opposite meaning; this tool treats them as the upright theme under strain.
A simple three-card spread where each position tells part of a story: the first card shows what led to the current situation, the second shows where things stand now, and the third shows where they're headed.
Another three-card layout, more decision-focused: the first card names the situation you're in, the second suggests an action or approach, and the third shows the likely result of taking it.
A traditional ten-card spread that gives a fuller picture of a question: it covers the present situation, the immediate challenge, its root cause, the recent past and near future, your own stance, outside influences, your hopes and fears, and the final outcome.
Yes — all 22 Major Arcana cards (The Fool through The World) and all 56 Minor Arcana cards across Wands, Cups, Swords, and Pentacles, including the Ace through Ten and the Page, Knight, Queen, and King of each suit.