氣場 HomeField — a homebuyer's feng-shui lens for Zillow, Redfin and Realtor listings
See a home's 氣場
before you buy.
A homebuyer's feng-shui lens for Zillow, Redfin & Realtor — it reads a home's surroundings the way a form-school reading would, from public map data.
It reads maps, not fate.
What it reads
On the listing page you're already viewing, HomeField screens the property's surroundings for the patterns a 形勢 (form-school) reading looks at — each shown with the tradition named, its practical modern correlate, and one thing you can actually check.
A road counts as “virtual water”: curving away (反弓) gathers nothing, curving to embrace (玉帶) shelters. We check which side of the bend the home is on.
A road driving straight at the door like an arrow — which in practice means a line of oncoming traffic and headlights.
A neighbour's wall edge cutting toward the home like a cleaver — a close facade edge that also presses on light and outlook.
A narrow slot between two towers in front of the home — and in practice a wind tunnel (Venturi) that accelerates gusts.
A building towering far above its neighbours with no “backing” — a lone peak, exposed to wind and prone to sway.
The pocket of a dead-end — quiet and low-traffic, but with little through-flow and one way in and out. A contested position.
The form of nearby water: embracing is a jade belt; curving away or lapping the foot is adverse — and the outer bank is where erosion and flood risk concentrate.
Nearby land uses — cemetery, hospital, rail, power lines, freeway, industry, fuel, substation — each with a traditional 煞 name and a real-world effect.
The home's rough facing, estimated from the street — 8 sectors only. A precise facing needs a compass on site, so you can set it yourself.
Front-door patterns — 明堂, 藏門, 壓頂, 塞門 and more — that you match against the listing photos yourself. Self-reported, so every entrance finding is labeled low confidence.
Every factor carries its 五行 (Five Elements) reading, and the modern layer cites real references — FEMA flood maps, freeway setbacks, power-line proximity — so the reading stays evidence-based, with honest confidence on every line.
Honest by design
What it is
- A homebuyer's cultural + practical screening tool
- A calm second opinion, calibrated and evidence-based
- Bilingual — English-primary, with co-equal Chinese terms and a Traditional-Chinese view to share with family
What it isn't
- Not a fortune teller or a horoscope
- Not a substitute for a site visit, an inspector, or a practitioner
- Not tracking you — analysis runs on public map data; nothing about you is sent anywhere
Questions
What is HomeField 氣場?
A free browser extension that screens a home listing's surroundings through feng-shui form-school (形勢) principles, from public map data, right on the Zillow, Redfin, or Realtor page you're viewing. Every finding is confidence-labeled and cites a modern correlate. It reads maps, not fate — not a fortune teller.
How do I check the feng shui of a house I want to buy?
Open the listing and click Analyze. HomeField reads the road form, poison arrows, the home's facing, nearby water, and the wider landform, and shows each factor with the tradition named, a practical modern correlate, and one thing you can verify in person — a calm second opinion, never a substitute for a site visit or a practitioner.
Is it a fortune teller or a horoscope?
No. It's a cultural and practical screening lens based on observable form (形勢), not divination — no BaZi, no flying stars, no predictions about your future, wealth, or health.
What data does it collect about me?
Nothing about you. When you click Analyze, only the listing's address or coordinates go to geocoding and OpenStreetMap. Your browsing, other tabs, and personal information are never collected, profiled, or sold. See the privacy policy.
Which sites does it work on, and what does it cost?
Zillow, Redfin, and Realtor.com listing pages. Free during the beta.