Yut fortune-telling uses Korea's traditional Yut sticks (윷) to draw a daily reading. Toss the four sticks three times and the resulting combination is mapped to one of 64 hexagrams of fortune, the same divination format used at Korean New Year for generations.
How a reading is made
Each stick lands either flat (1) or round (0). Three throws produce three numbers, and that triplet selects one of the 64 prepared verses. The verses cover health, wealth, relationships, and timing of decisions, written in classical Korean fortune-telling style and rendered into modern language.
How to read your verse
Treat the verse as a mirror, not a forecast. The wording is intentionally broad so you can apply it to whatever decision is in front of you today. If a phrase resonates strongly, it is usually because it lined up with something you were already half-thinking — that is the signal worth acting on.
FAQ
- Can I draw multiple readings per day?
- Tradition says one reading per day per question. Re-rolling for a better answer defeats the purpose of using the result for self-reflection.
- Is this real Yut divination?
- The 64-verse mapping is the same one published in classical Korean almanacs (사주풀이). The randomness comes from genuine pseudo-random throws, not a fixed table.





















