What Is BaZi?
FateAlert is built around BaZi, also known as the Four Pillars of Destiny, a traditional Chinese system that reads a life chart from the year, month, day, and hour of birth. The app keeps that structure visible and turns it into a personal guide supported by modern AI. After entering birth date and time, users can read about personality, fortune, relationships, and life direction without having to decode every classical term on their own.
Your Personal Birth Chart
The birth chart section generates a complete Four Pillars chart and explains the parts that usually matter most in BaZi reading. It covers the Day Master, elemental balance, Ten Gods, hidden stems, and Luck Pillars across the life journey. Each pillar is presented as a way to look at strengths, challenges, and potential, so the chart feels less like a wall of symbols and more like something a non-specialist can revisit.
Daily, Monthly & Yearly Fortune
FateAlert also includes a fortune calendar. The app gives personalized daily fortune updates, monthly trends for career, love, health, and wealth, yearly forecasts, risk alerts, and auspicious or inauspicious date guidance. This makes the product useful beyond the first birth chart reading, because timing, reminders, and date guidance are part of the regular experience.
AI Personal Advisor
The AI advisor is trained around BaZi principles and lets users ask follow-up questions about career, relationships, and personal growth. Instead of leaving the chart as a static report, FateAlert gives a place to ask for contextual explanation when a term, trend, or relationship topic needs more detail.
Love & Compatibility
The compatibility section covers romantic compatibility, zodiac and Five Elements harmony, marriage compatibility, and emotional or relationship tendencies. It is not limited to couples. Users can add multiple profiles and compare family harmony, friendship compatibility, professional relationships, and partnership dynamics.
Additional Features
FateAlert supports multiple languages, includes an elegant dark mode, and uses a privacy-focused design. The overall product is closest to a BaZi workbench for people who want traditional Four Pillars material presented in a cleaner, more readable app interface.


