Feng Shui & Horoscope 2024
Rating
| Updated : | Mar 10, 2026 |
| Version : | 1.0.0 |
| Developer : | Unknown |
About App
Okay—full disclosure: I nerded out with this app at 2 a.m. (don’t judge). I locked the Flying Star map to my apartment’s facing direction, overlaid the Bagua, and yeah—my so-called “wealth corner” was under a nasty star. I stared at the red sector for a while. Then I followed the app’s recommended cure (simple stuff—move a plant, add metal), and no, it wasn’t instant gold raining from the sky. But two weeks later? My biggest client emailed first. Coincidence? Maybe. Worth trying? Absolutely.
This app is not for people who want a flashy gimmick. It’s a toolset: Chinese Horoscope Forecast, Annual and Monthly Flying Star charts, Bagua Aspiration formula, and a Kua number calculator with a built-in compass. I set up three profiles (me, my partner, my roommate) and switched between them like flipping channels. The interface tells you which sectors might be unlucky, where Tai Sui lives this year, and where the Three Killings might lurk. Handy. Practical. A little bossy—like an aunt who rearranges your furniture.
Don’t expect magic. Don’t expect perfect translations. But do expect real formulas—ancient methods presented in plain English (mostly). The Kua compass is neat: tap, align, and it spits out your favorable and unfavorable directions. The app nudges you to face your good directions when working or sleeping—simple behavioral changes that can change routines. That, I’ll take.
Yes, there are quirks. The UI isn’t slick like a meditation app; it’s more workshop than spa. Ads pop unless you unlock premium. The compass accuracy depends on your phone (so don’t blame the app if your magnetometer is sleepy). Also—some of the cure suggestions are understandably generic; you’ll still need common sense.
If you’re new: start with the Chinese Horoscope Forecast and a single profile. If you’re seasoned: play with yearly/monthly Flying Star overlays and lock maps to faces. If you’re skeptical: try one small change (move a lamp, sit facing a good direction) and watch for minor shifts. That’s the whole point—tiny nudges, repeated over time.
Download it if you want a real, gritty Feng Shui toolkit in your pocket. It won’t whisper fortunes to you—nope. But it will give you charts, clear steps, and enough nerdy detail to keep you occupied during an insomnia-fueled night of home optimization.
This app is not for people who want a flashy gimmick. It’s a toolset: Chinese Horoscope Forecast, Annual and Monthly Flying Star charts, Bagua Aspiration formula, and a Kua number calculator with a built-in compass. I set up three profiles (me, my partner, my roommate) and switched between them like flipping channels. The interface tells you which sectors might be unlucky, where Tai Sui lives this year, and where the Three Killings might lurk. Handy. Practical. A little bossy—like an aunt who rearranges your furniture.
Don’t expect magic. Don’t expect perfect translations. But do expect real formulas—ancient methods presented in plain English (mostly). The Kua compass is neat: tap, align, and it spits out your favorable and unfavorable directions. The app nudges you to face your good directions when working or sleeping—simple behavioral changes that can change routines. That, I’ll take.
Yes, there are quirks. The UI isn’t slick like a meditation app; it’s more workshop than spa. Ads pop unless you unlock premium. The compass accuracy depends on your phone (so don’t blame the app if your magnetometer is sleepy). Also—some of the cure suggestions are understandably generic; you’ll still need common sense.
If you’re new: start with the Chinese Horoscope Forecast and a single profile. If you’re seasoned: play with yearly/monthly Flying Star overlays and lock maps to faces. If you’re skeptical: try one small change (move a lamp, sit facing a good direction) and watch for minor shifts. That’s the whole point—tiny nudges, repeated over time.
Download it if you want a real, gritty Feng Shui toolkit in your pocket. It won’t whisper fortunes to you—nope. But it will give you charts, clear steps, and enough nerdy detail to keep you occupied during an insomnia-fueled night of home optimization.
Editor's Review
The reviewer approached Feng Shui & Horoscope 2024 like a mildly curious roommate—skeptical at first, then oddly committed by midnight. The app bundles time-tested Chinese geomancy tools: Chinese horoscope forecasts, annual and monthly Flying Star charts, Bagua aspiration overlays, and a Kua number compass. It’s aimed at both newcomers and more experienced practitioners, and it mostly delivers on that promise.
Design-wise, the app favors function over sheen. Pages load fast; charts are dense but readable. The Bagua overlays and the ability to lock maps to a property facing direction are practical features that make the app useful for real-world adjustments. The Kua compass works well when the phone’s sensors cooperate. When they don’t—well, that’s a device problem more than an app problem, but users will notice.
There are some predictable trade-offs. The interface can feel dated in places; translations occasionally read like somebody hit auto-translate and didn't double-check. A few powerful features are behind a paywall, which is not unusual but worth noting. Ads are present in the free tier and can interrupt flow when you’re mid-chart.
User scenarios where this app shines: someone rearranging a home office, a small business owner mapping out an entrance, or a family storing multiple profiles for yearly readings. The app is not a replacement for an in-person consultation with a seasoned practitioner, but it’s an excellent bridge—clear formulas, step-by-step overlays, practical cure suggestions.
A short dialogue the reviewer had with a friend summed it up:
Reviewer: "Does this actually help?"
Friend: "It made me move my desk. Felt better. Work got smoother."
That kind of modest win is common. The app won’t promise instant wealth. It won’t fix deep structural problems in a house. What it does is show where attention might help, how to apply basic cures, and how to track changes over months.
Bottom line: solid toolset, honest results, some polish needed. Good for DIYers and curious users; serious practitioners will appreciate the charts but might miss richer commentary or local customization. Worth a try—especially if you want actionable steps rather than vague horoscopes.
Pros
- Comprehensive Flying Star and annual charts
- Multiple profiles for personalized readings
- Built-in Kua compass and Bagua overlay
- Plain-language guidance for beginners
Cons
- Ads and paywall hide some features
- Compass accuracy depends on phone sensors
- Interface feels a bit dated in places
- Some translations are slightly awkward
Google Play
Good App Guaranteed
We only provide official apps from the App Store, Google Play,
which do not contain viruses and malware, please feel free to click!