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  2. Crystal ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_ball

    A crystal ball is a crystal or glass ball commonly used in fortune-telling. It is generally associated with the performance of clairvoyance and scrying . Used since Antiquity , crystal balls have had a broad reputation with witchcraft , including modern times with charlatan acts and amusements at circus venues, festivals , etc.

  3. Mindball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mindball

    An Early Access version of Mindball Play was launched on Steam December 1, 2016. The full version was launched in 2018. Similar games have been developed featuring biofeedback, a concept similar to neurofeedback used by Mindball. In 1974, the game Will Ball was developed featuring a premise similar to Mindball though only using biofeedback.

  4. Fortune-telling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortune-telling

    An example of divination or fortune telling as purely an item of pop culture, with little or no vestiges of belief in the occult, would be the Magic 8 Ball sold as a toy by Mattel, or Paul the Octopus, an octopus at the Sea Life Aquarium at Oberhausen used to predict the outcome of matches played by the Germany national football team. [3]

  5. Fortune teller machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortune_teller_machine

    Once a selection is made using a rotary dial that illuminates the player's astrological sign of choice, the animated Gypsy fortune teller moves her head above a lighted crystal ball while holding a fan of playing cards in her right hand and magic wand in her left hand. Featured sophisticated movements (nods, turns her head, breathes).

  6. Alexander (magician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_(magician)

    Claude Alexander Conlin (June 30, 1880 – August 5, 1954), also known as Alexander, C. Alexander, Alexander the Crystal Seer, and Alexander the Man Who Knows, was an American spiritual author, vaudeville magician who specialized in mentalism and psychic reading acts, dressed in Oriental style robes and a feathered turban, and often used a crystal ball as a prop.

  7. Scrying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrying

    Scrying, also referred to as "seeing" or "peeping," is a practice rooted in divination and fortune-telling.It involves gazing into a medium, hoping to receive significant messages or visions that could offer personal guidance, prophecy, revelation, or inspiration. [1]

  8. Psychic reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychic_reading

    Psychic reader booth at a fair. A psychic reading is a specific attempt to discern information through the use of heightened perceptive abilities; or natural extensions of the basic human senses of sight, sound, touch, taste and instinct.

  9. Palantír - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palantír

    [5] [4] Shippey suggests that this consistent pattern is Tolkien's way of telling the reader that one should not "speculate" – the word meaning both to try to double-guess the future, and to look into a mirror (Latin: speculum 'glass or mirror') or crystal ball – but should trust in one's luck and make one's own mind up, courageously facing ...