What if a 1,000-year-old Chinese fortune system already knew your story?
Tie Ban Shen Shu — the "Iron Plate Divine Number" (鐵板神數) — doesn't guess. It hands you strange, exact little poems about your life.
"No brothers." "Marriage at 27." "A promotion in the Year of the Rabbit… then a broken heart."
Creepy? Maybe. Fun? Definitely.
Legend says an 11th-century scholar named Shao Yong wrote 18,144 verses to cover every human life ever lived. Yours included.
Want to test that?
Compute with an abacus. Find your numbers. Read your poems. See how many already fit your past.
Then ask yourself — is the iron plate right about your future too?
Try it. You might surprise yourself. Use any language. We do not keep your records.
私隱/Privacy:本站不保存您的出生資料。如需保留命書,請於對話結束時點按「下載命書」。 We do not keep your birth data on file. To keep a copy of your reading, use the Download button at the end of your session.
這次推算與您的契合度?
How well did this reading match you? Your feedback helps refine it. Everything here is optional.
僅用於回覆,不作他用。 Used only to follow up — nothing else.
Iron Plate Divine Number is traditionally attributed to the Northern Song scholar Shao Yong (邵雍 / 邵康節, 1011–1077), heir to the Chen Tuan–Li Zhicai line of Yi-studies and author of the Huangji Jingshi. It rose to prominence in the Qing dynasty and is over two centuries old. "Iron Plate" denotes a reading as fixed and unalterable as iron.
Tradition divides the art into Southern and Northern schools. The Southern school carries 12,000 verses and works mainly from the day- and hour-pillars; it reached Hong Kong in the early 20th century and survives in the Lingnan line. The Northern school — simpler, built on the month- and hour-pillars, and today often called Shaozi (邵子) numerology — is nearly lost in everyday practice. This site draws on both: the Southern line's 六親 verses and the Northern Shaozi methods, set side by side.
It has long been regarded as the most exacting of Chinese fate arts, famous above all for naming a person's "six relations" (parents, siblings, spouse, children) by zodiac and age with startling precision. Masters once read a whole life from an abacus and a book of verses. In modern times the Hong Kong master Dong Munie ("Dong Banxian," 1922–2024) made the art renowned.
In outline: the birth date and time become the four pillars, and the ke (the quarter within the two-hour period) is fixed; each pillar yields a hexagram — year for parents, month for siblings, day for spouse, time for children — pointing to a pre-written classical verse. The verses are fixed in old texts, not invented on the spot; the mapping from number to verse has always been the practitioner's guarded secret. This site reproduces the computation and renders the verses into plain language. The matrix computes, you read, the AI only translates.
本站 · About this site
ironscript.app 以程式重現上述推算,並結合 AI 將條文譯為白話,方便今人閱讀。本站不保存您的出生資料;如需留存命書,請於對話末點「下載」,或以電郵分享連結。
ironscript.app reconstructs this computation in software and pairs it with AI to render the verses into everyday language. We do not store your birth data; to keep a reading, use Download or email yourself the link at the end of a session.
條文成於明清,所述吉凶語彙為當時語境,非現代命運之必然。鐵板神數宜作傳統文化研究與興趣參考,非絕對預言,亦不替代醫療、法律、財務或心理之專業意見。
The verses date from Ming–Qing times; treat this as cultural heritage and curiosity, not absolute prophecy, and not a substitute for professional advice.