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Wong Tai Sin Temple
What you ask is answered.

Wong Tai Sin Fortune Sticks

A mirror, not a forecast.

Bring one question. Read the verse in plain English.

Ask a stick · read itAll free

Which number did you draw at the temple?

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What are Chinese fortune sticks?

Also called Kau Chim, Kau Cim, or fortune-telling sticks

Chinese fortune sticks are numbered bamboo lots used in temple divination, also known as divination sticks, wishing sticks, or chien tung. Wong Tai Sin fortune sticks use a 100-stick set, and each number leads to a short classical poem.

One question, one stick

Bring one real question, draw one stick, then read the verse against the topic you care about: love, career, health, study, home, or the whole situation.

Not generic fortune telling

The reading starts from the original poem. It is a mirror for your situation, not a prediction engine and not a replacement for professional advice.

100 sticks · 600 plain-English readings · the original Sik Sik Yuen verses · all free, no ads.
Your question stays in your own browser unless you buy a reading.

One stick, two ways to read it

Read it free first, go deeper when you need to.

Free

Plain-English reading

See what the verse is saying. 100 sticks × 6 topics, 600 readings, all free, no ads.

$2.99 · once

Deep reading

Applied to your actual question. Uses Master Cheung's 21-year framework to place your situation inside the verse.

Stick #11CareerVERY GOOD
Your situation

You want to change jobs, but you are not sure whether the timing is right.

The verse says

Willows hang their curtains, locking in green mist. The opportunity is already moving. You do not need to force it.

Specific advice

Do not resign in a rush this month. Start negotiating conditions, asking for resources, and testing whether the offer has real support behind it.

Full advice is in the reading you buy.

Most deep-read topic: careerRead free first →
Stick #1 The Best verse bookmark sample

Every stick comes with a verse bookmark

Draw a stick and the poem becomes a vertical bookmark, free to download, keep, or send to someone who needs it.

Shown: Stick #1 · THE BEST · poem only, no reading

How we're different

A real traditional verse, not generic AI copy

The poem is the source. The reading translates it into plain English.

A mirror for your question, not a scientific prediction

It helps you see the situation more clearly. It does not promise an outcome.

Free readings, no ads, no subscription trap

600 free pages stay free. The deeper reading is a one-time $2.99 option.

Not a horoscope, not a forecast, not a scare tactic

No pressure, no fate claims, no monthly plan that creeps up.

Five grades, plain English

THE BEST3 sticks

Everything's lining up.

VERY GOOD10 sticks

Things are going your way.

MODERATELY GOOD29 sticks

Positive — put in the effort.

AVERAGE40 sticks

A crossroads. Choose carefully.

POOR18 sticks

Slow down. Pay attention.

Other toolsKnow your tarot card?Already shuffled? Find the same message in a stick.

Frequently asked

How many fortune sticks are there?

100 sticks total. Each one comes with readings for 6 parts of life: career, love, health, study, home, and the whole situation. That's 600 readings you can explore on kaucim.ai.

Can I draw fortune sticks online?

Yes. Shake for a random stick or type in a number if you already drew one at the temple. You'll get your reading right away in English, Chinese, or Thai.

Do online fortune sticks work the same way?

Fortune sticks aren't crystal balls — they're more like a mirror. They help you think clearly about what you're going through. That works whether you're at the temple or on your phone.

What are Chinese fortune sticks?

Chinese fortune sticks are also called Kau Chim or Kau Cim. You ask one clear question, draw one numbered bamboo stick, then read the poem and grade tied to that number. kaucim.ai focuses on the Wong Tai Sin 100-stick tradition.

Are fortune sticks the same as fortune telling?

Not exactly. Fortune telling often promises an outcome. A fortune stick reading gives you a traditional poem and a frame for reflection, so it should not replace medical, legal, financial, or safety decisions.

I drew a bad stick. Now what?

Don't worry. A 'Poor' stick isn't bad luck — it's a heads-up. It points out what to watch out for and where to slow down. Read the full interpretation for practical next steps.

Is the interpretation AI-generated?

The 100 verses are over a thousand years old — we didn't write them. Free sign-page interpretations are hand-curated. The paid deep reading uses AI to anchor the verse to your specific question — never to invent or predict. We say where AI helps and where it doesn't.

Are you the official Wong Tai Sin Temple?

No. Sik Sik Yuen is the religious organization that operates Wong Tai Sin Temple in Hong Kong, and they run their own online lookup at siksikyuen.org.hk. kaucim.ai is an independent project that translates the tradition into plain English. We honor the tradition; we don't represent the temple.

Will this predict my future?

A fortune stick is a mirror, not a forecast, and not a scientific prediction. It won't tell you whether he'll text back, whether to take the job, or how next year goes. It will surface the part of your question you've been avoiding.

What is this?

Fortune sticks are a ritual with around 1,700 years of legend behind it, kept alive at Hong Kong's Wong Tai Sin Temple. You shake a bamboo cup, one stick falls out, and the number leads to a short poem. The poem is a mirror: it shows you what you already feel but have not put into words.

On kaucim.ai you can draw a stick, type the number you got at the temple, choose the topic on your mind, and read a plain-English interpretation grounded in the original poem. The reading is not a scientific prediction, and it does not decide for you.

Independence statement

kaucim.ai is an independent project, not affiliated with Sik Sik Yuen or Wong Tai Sin Temple. Sik Sik Yuen has its own official online lookup at siksikyuen.org.hk →