Monday, 20 October 2025

🩸 Horror Tiny Tarot — First Impressions


There’s something deliciously wrong about shuffling a deck that looks like it might bite back. The Horror Tiny Tarot landed in my post this week, all pint-sized and innocent-looking - until I opened the box. This one promises a full house of horror tropes, but the question is: are these cards simply inspired by the genre, or are they hiding specific monsters, slashers, and final girls between the suits? I’ve been riffling through the cards and feeling that mix of curiosity and caution only a true horror fan knows - the “I want to look closer, but also maybe not” feeling.

At a Glance:

  • Publisher: Insight/Titan

  • Art Style: Arty, dramatic, gothic. Lots of mist, reds, blacks and greys.

  • Size: Mini (about half standard tarot dimensions)

  • Theme: Classic horror tropes - possibly film-inspired?

  • Companion Guide: Yes, looks good at first glance - though the print's tiny, as you might expect!

First Impressions:
The deck is surprisingly sturdy for its size, though the card faces are packed with detail - almost too much for the scale, depending on the lighting. I’ve already spotted a few nods to horror staples, and I’m intrigued to see if the imagery relies on recognition or manages to evoke the right shivers on its own. It feels like a deck made by someone who loves the genre and understands tarot’s more theatrical side.

What I’m Curious About:

  • Does it balance scares with symbolism, or lean fully into camp horror aesthetic?

  • Are the archetypes clearly expressed without needing to “get the reference”?

  • And, of course - will I start hearing creepy violins every time I draw a Major?

First Draw:
My first card from the Horror Tiny Tarot was the Knight of Cups, here reimagined as the Headless Horseman - galloping through the mists, pumpkin head in hand, lantern glow flickering like a heartbeat. It’s an unexpectedly poetic choice: the Knight of Cups is usually all charm and idealism, but this version adds a haunting twist. He’s still a messenger of emotion, but one who’s lost his head to the passion (or perhaps the madness) that drives him. It’s equal parts romantic and macabre - which, if this first draw is anything to go by, might just be the perfect mission statement for the whole deck.


Closing Thoughts:

One card down, seventy-seven to go - and I’m already half in love, half afraid. The Horror Tiny Tarot promises to be a deck of jump scares and symbolism in equal measure. I’ll be back soon with more impressions… assuming nothing follows me home from the draw.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Horror Tiny Tarot - Overview

Mists, vampires, goblins and all things foul. In other words, a perfect deck for this time of year! The question, for me, is whether these a...