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Tarot Tools Terms of Use

Rules and boundaries for using Tarot Tools as an entertainment and self-reflection website.

Plain-language policy

Do not use this site for medical, legal, financial, emergency, or other professional decisions. The tools are prompts for reflection, not directives.

Read methodology

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Entertainment-only use

Tarot Tools provides prompts for reflection, journaling, and low-stakes self-inquiry. It does not provide professional advice, factual certainty, or instructions that should override the reader's judgment. The terms should make this boundary visible before a reader treats a result as a decision engine.

  • Use readings for reflection, not certainty.
  • Do not use readings for medical, legal, financial, emergency, or safety choices.
  • Do not treat another person's consent or intention as something a card can decide.

Responsible interaction

Readers should ask questions that preserve agency. A healthy prompt focuses on what the reader can notice, ask, repair, test, or choose. The product may block or reframe prompts that appear unsafe or outside the site's scope. That is not a failure of the tool; it is part of the product promise.

  • Prefer open reflection questions.
  • Use professional support for high-stakes decisions.
  • Stop using the tool if repeated draws increase anxiety.

Content and artwork

Card descriptions and original SVG assets are created for this site. They should not be confused with a full historical deck archive or a licensed reproduction of a modern deck. Copyright, correction, and attribution concerns should have a monitored response path before any claim becomes serious.

  • Original project SVGs are used for card visuals.
  • Modern deck artwork is not reused.
  • Correction and licensing concerns need a documented handling process before launch.

Examples of use that do not fit

A tarot result should not be used as the only reason to end a relationship, accept a job, send a risky message, ignore a professional, diagnose another person, or delay urgent support. It can help a reader name a feeling, prepare a conversation, compare options, or write a journal prompt, but the final choice still needs evidence, consent, context, and ordinary judgment. If a reading creates pressure to keep asking until the answer changes, the responsible move is to stop drawing and return later with a calmer, narrower question. These terms exist to keep the tool useful without pretending reflection can replace real-world care, conversation, or accountability.

  • Do not use tarot to bypass consent, safety planning, contracts, or professional care.
  • Do not treat repeated draws as stronger evidence than one clear answer.
  • Use the tools as reflection aids, then verify important choices outside the site.

Sharing and interpretation responsibility

If a reader copies, downloads, or shares a result, they are responsible for adding context and avoiding claims the tool did not make. A shared tarot result should not be presented as proof about another person's feelings, a guaranteed future, or an instruction someone else must follow. The safest use is to share a reflection sentence, a question, or a journal prompt, while keeping sensitive names, dates, and private situations out of public posts unless everyone involved has agreed.

  • Share reflections, not accusations or proof claims.
  • Remove sensitive details before posting a result publicly.
  • Return to the methodology page when a result feels too certain or too intense.