Case Hub
Use this hub to see how other people frame questions, analyze a situation and turn a result into next steps. Start from the cases that feel closest to your situation.
Browse cases by scenario
Choose case collections by scenario, question type and the kind of example you want to review first.
Daily case archive
Use recurring daily entries to see how questions are turned into structured readings.
Liuyao case studies
Study full liuyao cases from casting and setup to interpretation and feedback.
Liuyao timing case studies
Study how message timing, action timing and result timing are separated in real liuyao cases.
Qian hexagram case study
Study one detailed hexagram example to understand reasoning flow, boundaries and follow-up paths.
User stories
See how users turn readings into reflection, action and review.
Career examples
See how career questions are broken into decisions, timing and next steps.
Relationship examples
See how relationship questions are unpacked into communication, boundaries and timing.
BaZi wealth cases
Review how wealth stars, output, peers and luck-cycle timing are unpacked in BaZi case studies.
BaZi marriage cases
Review how partner stars, day-branch structure and relationship turning points are unpacked in BaZi marriage cases.
Daily practice examples
See how ongoing practice builds stronger question design and review habits.
Choose liuyao cases by scenario
If you already know whether you want relationships, career, timing or general practice, start from this layer instead of scanning the whole page first.
Relationship scenarios
If you care more about relationship progress, communication rhythm, boundaries and interaction judgment, start from this group.
Career and decisions
If you are reviewing job changes, work decisions, career movement and action order, start from this group.
Timing judgment
If you care more about when a message arrives or when a result lands, start with these timing cases.
General practice
If you want to start from full casting flows, single-hexagram breakdowns and daily practice, use this group first.
Find cases by reading goal
If you already know what you want from the cases, start with one of these paths.
See how others ask questions
Start with the daily archive and practice cases to see how vague questions become specific ones.
Clarify the question type first
If you are still deciding between relationship, work, disputes, exams, travel or lost-item questions, go back to the learn hub and liuyao guide before opening cases.
See one case unpacked in depth
Open a detailed single-case study to see how context, reasoning and boundaries are written out.
See a full liuyao case flow
If you want one full liuyao flow from casting to feedback, start with the practical case collection.
See how timing is unpacked
If you care most about when a message or result will land, start with the liuyao timing case collection.
See career or relationship scenarios
For work, cooperation, relationship and interaction questions, start with these thematic case groups.
See how BaZi cases are unpacked
If you want to see how chart structure, luck-cycle validation and marriage or wealth themes are unpacked in BaZi case studies, start with these two collections.
See how results become action
If you care more about review, execution and follow-up, start with user stories and practice reviews.
What to observe when reading a case
Focus on how the case defines the background, goal and timeframe. If the framing is vague, the interpretation usually becomes unstable too.
Notice how the case breaks the reading into risks, options, timing and next steps rather than memorizing only the final sentence.
Good cases explain what is only a reference and where more real-world context is still needed.
A case is not a ready-made template. The real value is how it leads to a second question and a next action.
How cases are framed and curated
When reading a case, focus not only on the conclusion, but also on the context, reasoning and next-step advice.
A case should explain the background and goal before it moves into the reading. Without context, a case looks like a slogan instead of an analysis.
Readers should be able to see the reasoning path rather than only a stack of labels such as lucky, unlucky, suitable or unsuitable.
A useful case gives the reader something actionable to review, not an absolute promise disguised as a conclusion.
Career, relationship, stage-based and long-structure questions fit different methods. They should not be forced into one generic template.
Where to go after the cases
If the cases have helped you find a direction, continue into the learn hub, the help center, or start your own reading.
Understanding method and question design first makes cases easier to read.
Review usage boundaries, free scope and support notes.
If you are ready to start your own reading, continue from the AI fortune page.
If the question is more concrete, continue from the AI divination hub.