The one-sentence version
Type a real question about your life. The app reads your chart, applies the classical rules relevant to your question, and answers — with the reasoning shown so you can see where the answer came from.
Why this exists
A great astrologer does three things at once: they know the classical rules, they know your chart, and they speak plain language. The rare combination is the third one — most astrologers can do the first two but talk in a code only other astrologers understand.
This feature is designed around the gap. You bring the question in everyday language (“should I take this job?”). We translate it into the astrological terms it maps onto, run the classical analysis, translate the answer back to everyday language, and show you the rules we used.
What happens when you ask
- Question classification. The question gets routed to the relevant part of the chart. A career question pulls the 10th house, the 10th lord, its dignity, Shadbala, the current Mahadasha, the D10 divisional chart, and relevant yogas. A marriage question pulls the 7th house, Venus/Jupiter, the D9, and Upapada.
- Rule application. We apply the classical rules in order — strength of lord, aspects, yogas, current period. Each rule returns a finding.
- Timing layer. Your current and upcoming dashas are overlaid. A yoga is dormant until its dasha runs, so timing questions resolve against the dasha schedule.
- Transit check.Today's sky is compared against the relevant houses and planets. A favourable yoga running in a difficult transit produces a different near-term answer than one in a favourable transit.
- Natural-language translation. The AI takes the compiled findings and writes you a plain-English answer. Every claim in the answer traces back to a specific rule we ran.
The citation principle
Every interpretation tells you whyit's saying what it's saying:
- Which house and lord it consulted.
- Which classical text the rule is from.
- Which dasha or transit is relevant.
Where the AI reasons beyond the direct classical rule — filling in a gap, applying common sense — it marks that part as inference, not scripture. You can see where the tradition ended and where the reasoning extended.
What makes a good question
- Specific.“Will my second marriage last?” is better than “am I lucky in love?”
- Time-anchored.“When in the next three years will my career shift?” gives the timing engine something to work with.
- Grounded in something real.Describe the situation briefly. If you've added your context (marriage status, job, health) in the setup, the app already knows — you don't have to repeat it.
- One at a time. Compound questions get compound (and weaker) answers.
What it won't do
It won't tell you whether a specific person is cheating on you. It won't promise specific outcomes with certainty. It won't give medical, legal, or financial advice. For those, consult the appropriate professional.
What it will do is give you the shape of an answer that classical Vedic astrology can support — and tell you honestly when a question is out of scope.
What the app does
- Parses your question into the relevant astrological framing.
- Runs the classical rule set against your chart.
- Overlays your current dashas and transits.
- Returns a plain-English answer with the reasoning traceable to specific rules and classical sources.
- Keeps a history of your conversations so you can see how earlier predictions aged.
Classical source
The answer pipeline draws from BPHS (house and lord analysis, yoga detection, dashas), Phaladeepika (interpretation weighting), Jaimini Sutras (Karaka- and Arudha-based reading), and Saravali (ascendant and planetary signification). For timing questions, the transit and Ashtakavarga layers apply.