Fan-Tel: The Fan That Tells Your Fortune
1937
Designed by (Uncredited)
Published by O Schoenhut & Co. Inc.
Fan-Tel is a vintage fortune-telling parlor game in which players draw fan-blade-shaped sticks from a cardboard tube to reveal whimsical prophecies, cryptic answers, or playful advice. A simple yet captivating lot-drawing ritual, Fan-Tel invites participants to ask a question, pull a fan from the bundle, and read their fortune aloud for all to hear. Rooted in the fading glow of early 20th-century spiritualism and the golden age of s ance culture, Fan-Tel reimagines mystical traditions as lighthearted entertainment. Its design echoes Eastern fortune practices like Kau Chim (Chinese fortune sticks / Chi-Chi sticks), while the physical "fan" shape and packaging leans into the Orientalist aesthetics popular in Western mystic imagery—complete with overtones of palm readers, mystics, and wise sages from a distant land. Though gameplay is solitary or turn-based, the real joy of Fan-Tel lies in its performative charm. It transforms any gathering into a mini s ance of entertainment, with each fortune providing either laughter, contemplation, or a dash of drama. A spiritual elder cousin to the Magic 8-Ball, cootie catchers, and other "parlor prophecy" novelties, Fan-Tel represents a time when mysticism stepped off the altar and onto the coffee table.
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Game data sourced from BoardGameGeek, used under their API terms.
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