Draw a fortune stick online.
One question. One stick from 100. One reading, in plain English.
100 classical sticks · 6 life topics · Free
How to draw a stick
- 01Hold one real question. Narrow your concern to a single question in one life area — career, love, health, study, home, or general.
- 02Shake and release. Tap the shake control. A random stick is drawn from 1 to 100. Accept the first result, as you would at the temple.
- 03Read the poem, then the reading. The classical Chinese poem appears alongside a plain-English interpretation. Read both before you act.
Temple bamboo cup vs online draw
The 100 sticks and their classical poems are identical to the temple canon. Only the shake and the reading are re-engineered.
What each reading includes
- Your stick number, from 1 to 100
- The classical grade — from The Best to Poor
- The original four-line Chinese poem
- English interpretation for your life area
- The legend or historical episode referenced
- Links to the same stick for other life areas
Other tools on kaucim.ai
Already know your number?
Frequently asked
Can I really draw a Wong Tai Sin fortune stick online?
Yes. This tool replicates the temple bamboo cup in code: a random number from 1 to 100 is selected, and the classical poem attached to that stick is shown alongside an English interpretation. The structure of the ritual — one question, one stick, one reading — is preserved.
Is this connected to the Wong Tai Sin Temple in Hong Kong?
No. kaucim.ai is independent and not affiliated with the temple. The 100 fortune sticks and their classical Chinese poems are public heritage; the modern English interpretations are written by our editors.
How is this different from the temple version?
At the temple, you shake a bamboo cup until one stick falls, then take the number to an interpreter. Here, the shake is randomised in the browser and the interpretation is delivered in plain English in seconds. The material weight is missing, but the structure is the same.
What does kau cim mean, and is this the same as sheng bei or jiaobei?
Kau cim (求籤) is the Cantonese name for fortune stick drawing. Sheng bei / jiaobei (聖杯 / 筊杯) are moon blocks used for yes-no confirmation — a separate ritual. This page is the fortune stick draw; for moon blocks, use the jiaobei tool.
Is it free?
Yes. Drawing a stick and reading the interpretation is free. An optional personalised paid reading is offered after the draw but is never required.
Will I always get the same stick?
No. Each shake selects a new random number from 1 to 100. Traditional practice treats the first result as the answer to the held question, rather than re-drawing until a preferred result appears.