
Oracle Tarot Reader
Professional-grade Tarot reading skill featuring random card draws, RWS imagery, and psychological interpretations.
skill install https://www.promptspace.in/skills/oracle-tarot-readerWhat it does
This skill provides a high-fidelity, psychological Tarot reading experience directly within your AI agent. It utilizes the iconic Rider-Waite-Smith deck (78 cards) and pairs it with a sophisticated Adlerian-style interpretation framework. Unlike basic prompting, this skill uses a dedicated Python engine to ensure true random card draws—including reversals—and handles image processing, language detection, and structured spread selection (from single-card pulls to 5-card crosses).
Why use this skill
Standard LLMs often hallucinate card meanings or repeat the same symbols. This skill anchors the agent with a robust 78-card database and a script-driven randomization process. It specifically avoids "woo-woo" mystical jargon, instead offering a modern, psychological approach focused on reflection, patterns of behavior, and near-future action. It handles all the heavy lifting of image management, position labeling, and multi-language support (English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, and Portuguese).
Supported tools
- Python 3 execution environment
- Pillow (optional for automatic image rotation of reversed cards)
- Local or cloud file systems for image hosting and transcript saving
The output is a beautifully formatted markdown reading featuring actual card images, position-specific analysis, and a synthesized final summary.
Use cases
- Conduct random, multi-card readings with the Rider-Waite-Smith deck
- Provide psychological insight without deterministic or mystical jargon
- Auto-detect and respond in 6 different languages fluently
- Generate and save markdown transcripts of readings with card images
Example
Prompt
Output
The Spread: 3-Card Cross (Situation/Challenge/Guidance) Position 1: Situation [The Fool - Upright] This card suggests you are at the precipice of a new beginning. Your current situation is characterized by a high degree of openness, but perhaps a lack of practical planning.