Showing posts with label deck comparison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deck comparison. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 April 2026

Deck Comparison: Wings & Crowns, Tarot of the Divine, Marseille Tarot

Three Ways to Break Your Heart (and One Questionable Man)

This evening I pulled out three decks with very different approaches to tarot:

  • The Romantasy deck (Wings and Crowns)

  • Tarot of the Divine

  • Marseille Tarot

Same three cards across all three: the Three of Swords, the Six of Pentacles, and the Knight of Cups.

What I got was less a comparison and more a personality test.


Three of Swords — How would you like your heartbreak?

Romantasy gives us three green swords suspended over the sea, each marked with a celestial symbol: sun, moon, star. It’s soft, symbolic, almost beautiful. This isn’t a scene of heartbreak - it’s the idea of it. Fate, cycles, emotion, inevitability. The kind of pain that feels written in the stars.


Tarot of the Divine
, meanwhile, has absolutely no interest in subtlety. A woman prepares to plunge a sword into herself beneath a storm-lit sky, drawn from a tragic Japanese legend. This is heartbreak as sacrifice. As inevitability. As something you walk into with your eyes open and your hands steady.


Marseille
gives you three swords and the quiet confidence that you know exactly what that means.


One gives you a moodboard. One gives you a tragedy. One gives you homework.


Six of Pentacles — Generosity, but at what cost?

In Romantasy, a delicate, bejewelled arm extends over six crowns, magic swirling around them. This is not casual generosity - this is courtly. Fae-adjacent. Potentially binding. You’re not just receiving a gift here; you’re entering into something. You might want to check the terms and conditions.


Tarot of the Divine
flips the dynamic entirely. An Inuit woman gathers coins offered by grateful beetles. This is reciprocity, not hierarchy. Kindness returned. A sense that generosity moves in circles rather than top-down.


Marseille
once again presents six coins, arranged with quiet, mathematical certainty. Balance exists. Interpret accordingly.


Here the question becomes: who holds the power? And does the deck think that matters?


Knight of Cups — Ah. Him.

Romantasy has fully committed to the bit. A young man stands by a window, holding a letter, sealing it with what might be wax and might be blood, and is described (correctly) as “charmingly rakish”. This man will absolutely write you poetry. This man will absolutely make questionable decisions. This man will absolutely ruin your life, but in a way that feels narratively satisfying.


Tarot of the Divine
gives us a Mongolian warrior on horseback, steady at the edge of rushing water, an eagle perched on his arm. This is still a romantic figure, but one with control, purpose, and direction. Emotion here is something carried with strength, not chaos.


Marseille
presents a knight holding a cup on a somewhat alarmingly small horse. He is, technically, doing his job.


One writes letters in blood, one crosses rivers with dignity, and one is a functional unit of emotional delivery.


So what’s the difference, really?

Looking at these three decks side by side, the contrast becomes clear:

  • Romantasy works in symbols, tropes, and vibes. It asks you to feel your way through the card.

  • Tarot of the Divine tells stories. It gives you narrative, context, and emotional clarity.

  • Marseille strips everything back to structure. It assumes you either know the system or are willing to meet it halfway.

None of these approaches is better than the others - but they teach you tarot in very different ways.

Romantasy says: you already understand this, somewhere in your bones.
Divine says: let me show you a story that explains it.
Marseille says: you’ve got the tools. Use them.


So now I’m curious:

Would you rather have your tarot heartbreak delivered as a tragic love story, a symbolic moodboard, or three swords and a silent expectation that you’ll cope?

Sunday, 22 February 2026

Different Decks, Same Question: Dark Daughters, Tarot of the Divine and Tarot of the Thousand and One Nights

Three Folklore Decks, One Story

Tarot decks often use mythology and folklore, but they don’t all do it the same way. Some teach specific stories and figures, while others use familiar roles - ruler, hero, mother, trickster - to shape the meaning of the cards.

In this series we’ll compare three decks:

  • Dark Daughter – a goddess-focused deck drawing figures from many cultures,

  • Tarot of the Divine – retelling myths and fairytales from across the world,

  • Tarot of the Thousand and One Nights – inspired by the storytelling world of the medieval Middle East.

The question isn’t which deck is “correct.” All follow the same tarot structure. The question is how each deck says the same thing differently.

As you read, notice which version you instinctively trust, resist, or feel comforted by. That reaction is part of the reading too.

Sunday, 8 February 2026

Different Decks, Same Question: Everyday Witch, Cosy Witch & Witches Tarot

If you’ve spent any time around tarot decks, you’ll notice one thing: they cluster around themes. Witches. Cats. Folklore. Crystals. Wild animals. Whatever aspect of life you can imagine, there’s probably a deck for it.

But even decks that share a theme can feel wildly different. The way a card is drawn, the atmosphere of the illustrations, the little details the artist chooses, they all shape how the deck “talks” to you.

In this post, we’re going to look at three witchy decks and how they handle the same four cards. This isn’t a contest for “which is better” or “more magical.” Instead, it’s a chance to see how each deck creates its own tone, voice, and approach to the same story.

By the end, you’ll see how the same Major or Minor Arcana can feel comforting, challenging, playful, or serious - depending entirely on the deck. And maybe, just maybe, you’ll notice what kind of conversation you want to have with your tarot cards.

Deck Review: Wings & Crowns Tarot Deck

Get a closer read on your own heart through a tarot deck pulled from the pages of your favorite romantasy novels. Choose a Major or Minor Ar...