Omikuji
About Online Omikuji
Draw omikuji online with seven fortune levels
This online omikuji generator draws from seven built-in fortune levels, from daikichi to daikyo, each with its own configured weight, color, short result, and meaning text. The same seed and fortune table can reproduce the same Japanese fortune slip through the verification drawer.
Japanese fortune slip ritual and share card
Omikuji uses one reveal path instead of a draw-mode toggle, keeping the Japanese fortune drawing flow simple. It can play local sound effects, show confetti for lucky levels, and offer a tie-it-away action for kyo and daikyo. The result share card shows the fortune for fun, while seed and verification details stay in the verification drawer rather than on the card.
A playful online fortune, not shrine-issued guidance
Treat the online omikuji result as a playful prompt for the day, not as a shrine-issued fortune slip, religious guidance, a prediction, or advice for important decisions. The page does not keep an account-based fortune history; copied text or shared cards are controlled by you.
FAQ
Common questions and answers about this topic.
What is omikuji?
Omikuji are fortune slips found at Japanese Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples. Visitors shake a cylindrical box, draw a numbered stick, and receive a slip with their fortune — from great blessing (daikichi) to great curse (daikyo), offering guidance on life's path.
What do the fortune levels mean?
From best to worst: Daikichi (great blessing), Kichi (blessing), Chukichi (middle blessing), Shokichi (small blessing), Suekichi (future blessing), Kyo (curse), and Daikyo (great curse). Each level includes a detailed explanation of its traditional meaning.
How does the online omikuji work?
To draw omikuji online, focus your mind, press the draw button, and the box will shake — just like at a shrine. After a moment, your Japanese fortune slip will appear with its rank and traditional meaning.
Can I draw omikuji multiple times?
Yes, you can draw as many times as you like. Each draw is its own moment — a fresh fortune awaits you every time.
What should I do if I get daikyo (great curse)?
In Japanese tradition, bad omikuji are tied to a tree or rack at the shrine to leave the bad luck behind. Since this is online, take comfort in knowing that daikyo means things can only get better from here!