View saved profiles together and explore mock compatibility links between them.
With your BaZi as the anchor, marriage, family, career, and friendship converge on one map.
Marriage, family, career, and friendship—all important ties on one graph. Scores and auspiciousness at a glance.
The score is derived from six types of natal factors in the two charts, including five-element and Ten Gods pairings, and reflects structural compatibility tendencies.
Select a person in the graph to see the compatibility score and main chart factors behind each of their links.
From chart calculation to AI analysis—three steps to your personal relationship graph.
Choose your chart from saved profiles as the center for comparison with others.
Pick their chart from saved profiles and label the relationship type (marriage, parent-child, career, friend, relative, etc.).
The system compares the natal factors between profiles and draws compatibility links with scores.
A BaZi relationship map visualizes how multiple people's charts interact. It supports marriage, parent-child, career partnerships, friends, relatives, and other relationship types.
The score is derived from six types of natal factors in the two charts, including day-pillar stem and branch combinations, year nayin, Ten Gods pairing, and useful-god complementarity, converted to a 0–100 scale that reflects structural compatibility tendencies.
No. The score only compares the natal factors of the two charts and does not involve time-based factors such as major or annual luck; the same pair of profiles always gets the same score.
Marriage/romance, parent-child (father-son, mother-child), career partnerships, close friends/confidants, friends, in-law dynamics, leader-subordinate, and other important relationship types.
A low score does not mean the relationship must fail. It suggests lower natural chart compatibility—but understanding differences and communicating at the right time can still build a strong bond.
This service is for entertainment only. Important decisions should also consider your own judgment, life experience, and professional advice.