In a lot of families, there's a Vedic astrologer the way some families have a family doctor — someone you call when you actually want a real read on something. A career move. A wedding date. Whether to take the new house in a difficult year. The reading isn't a horoscope. It's structural advice from someone who knows the chart and has been doing this for thirty years.
For most people, that access never existed in the first place. Sessions cost three hundred dollars and have to be booked weeks out. Horoscope apps fill the gap with entertainment — the free ones are horoscopes with extra steps, the expensive ones are five-dollar-per-fifteen-minutes chats that end before they start.
What we wanted, and didn't have
We wanted what an actual trusted Vedic astrologer does — but available at 2 a.m., grounded in the same classical texts (Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra, Phaladeepika, Saravali), with the same willingness to push back when the chart doesn't support what you're hoping for. With citations: which planet, which house, which dasha period, by date. With family in scope, because real life involves a spouse and a child and a parent, not just you.
Most importantly, we wanted an astrologer that would say no when the chart said no. The good human astrologers do this. The apps never do.
What this is, then
An AI that runs the actual chart math — sidereal, with ayanamsa, with a full set of divisional charts, current dasha and antardasha and pratyantardasha, transit overlays, nakshatra placements, and the chart of every person you've added to your family. A reasoner that picks which of those placements are relevant to the question you actually asked. A writer that drafts a reading, critiques its own draft, and revises — because the first draft of a careful answer is rarely the right one. Twenty-one verifier checks behind the scenes that catch the most common hallucination patterns before the reading lands.
And a register that doesn't sell remedies, doesn't dress information up as mysticism, doesn't pretend the chart guarantees an outcome. The chart shows the structure of the weather. You still have to decide what to do in it.
What it isn't
It isn't a horoscope feed. It isn't entertainment-coded. There's no daily push telling you your Tuesday will be hard, no compatibility-score animation, no zodiac meme deck. Those products are great at what they are — what they are is not what this is.
It also isn't a human astrologer. There are things a thirty-year practitioner can sense that an AI cannot, and you should know that going in. When something feels really weighty — a medical decision, a marriage decision, the move-the-family decision — book a session with a real human jyotishi for a second opinion. This is for the questions that arrive faster than appointments can.
How it got built
Carefully. With classical-text grounding from teachers who have given a tremendous amount of their time to checking the readings against what the tradition actually says. With a group of testers who ran several thousand readings through the system on real-life questions over the last year — career moves, school placements, surgery timing, the works. They were the ones who flagged when a reading sounded confident but the chart didn't support it. The verifier checks exist because of them.
If you're considering a reading, our honest ask is this: bring an actual question. Not the casually curious one — the one you've been turning over for weeks. That's what this is built for.
The chart shows the structure of the weather. You still have to decide what to do in it.