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Tarot The Complete Kit Review

Tarot The Complete Kit Review: also known as Tarot Nova by Dennis Fairchild 7 min read

4.7/5 - (6 votes)

Also known as Tarot Nova, this Dennis Fairchild kit pairs a compact 78-card tarot deck with approachable guidebook energy for everyday readings.

Tarot The Complete Kit, also known as Tarot Nova by Dennis Fairchild, is a practical, pocket-friendly tarot kit page: part flip-through, part card guide, and part prompt bank for real everyday questions. The available gallery currently shows 51 card images, so this review keeps the count honest instead of claiming a complete 78-card visual set.

What the page does offer is still useful: enough majors, cups, swords, wands, and pentacles to feel the voice of the deck clearly. The missing cards are: The High Priestess, The Emperor, The Hermit, Wheel of Fortune, The Hanged Man, The Star, The World, Ace of Wands, 4 of Wands, 6 of Wands, 8 of Wands, 9 of Wands, Knight of Wands, Ace of Cups, 2 of Cups, 4 of Cups, 8 of Cups, Ace of Swords, 10 of Swords, Queen of Swords, 3 of Pentacles, 6 of Pentacles, 8 of Pentacles, 10 of Pentacles, Knight of Pentacles, Queen of Pentacles, and King of Pentacles. The deck’s mood is simple, grounded, and easy to turn into a next step.

Why this archive feels easy to use

Some tarot pages are beautiful but slow. You need a long time with the art before the practical message becomes clear. Tarot The Complete Kit feels more direct. Cards like The Fool, The Magician, Strength, The Tower, 7 of Cups, and 2 of Pentacles translate quickly into daily language: begin, choose, stay steady, rebuild, stop fantasizing, and balance what is real.

That everyday quality matters because many readers are not asking giant mystical questions. We pull cards for school stress, work pressure, money choices, relationship timing, creative blocks, and the quiet question of what needs attention today.

The Fool card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
The Fool

Card study

The Fool: a new start without overplanning

The Fool is one of the clearest cards for this compact kit because it shows how practical the deck can be. I read it as a green light, but not as permission to be careless.

In a daily pull, The Fool says: try the next honest step before you demand the whole map. Open the document, send the message, walk into the meeting, or ask the first question.

How it feels in one-card pulls

For one-card readings, Tarot The Complete Kit / Tarot Nova works best when the question is clear. Instead of asking “What will happen to me?” ask “What do I need to do next?” or “Where am I making this harder than it needs to be?”

The deck also has a helpful emotional range. The cups cards in the available gallery are especially useful for relationship and mood questions. 5 of Cups names the hurt, 10 of Cups points toward emotional safety, and Queen of Cups asks for compassion with boundaries.

Starting fresh

The Fool card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
The Fool
The Magician card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
The Magician
2 of Wands card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
2 of Wands
Ace of Pentacles card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
Ace of Pentacles

This strip reads like the first week of a real plan: begin with curiosity, gather your tools, choose a direction, and make one solid move in the physical world.

Practical card language

The deck page is strongest when it turns symbols into usable advice. Justice asks for fairness and specifics. 4 of Swords says to stop pushing and recover. Ace of Pentacles says to choose the first real step, not the biggest dream.

I would not use this page as a replacement for a full physical-deck study session because the visual archive is partial. But I would use it as a clean preview, a flip-through companion, and a practical review before deciding whether the deck’s style fits my reading life.

7 of Cups card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
7 of Cups

Choice study

7 of Cups: real choices versus pretty distractions

The 7 of Cups is my favorite kind of everyday card because it speaks to a modern problem: too many options. It fits online shopping loops, crush confusion, career dreaming, and moments when imagination becomes fog.

The card does not say every dream is wrong. It asks which option has roots. A good journal prompt is: which choice still matters after the excitement fades?

Emotional reset

5 of Cups card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
5 of Cups
6 of Cups card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
6 of Cups
Queen of Cups card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
Queen of Cups
The Sun card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
The Sun

This feels like grief moving toward warmth: name what disappointed you, remember what is still sweet, care for your feelings, and let one bright thing back in.

Best reading uses

I would reach for Tarot The Complete Kit when I want a clear reading, not a complicated one. It suits daily draws, three-card spreads, study notes, and quick comparison work with other Rider-Waite-Smith-inspired decks.

The archive feeling also makes it good for reflective prompts. Pull one card and write one short paragraph: “Where does this show up in my ordinary life?” That question fits the page better than giant predictive spreads.

2 of Pentacles card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
2 of Pentacles

Balance study

2 of Pentacles: balance that has to be lived

The 2 of Pentacles is not dramatic; it is real life. This is the card for homework, money, messages, chores, and personal feelings all asking for attention at once.

My reading would be: stop trying to feel perfectly balanced before you act. Choose the next two things that must stay in motion, and let the rest wait.

Mental pressure

2 of Swords card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
2 of Swords
8 of Swords card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
8 of Swords
9 of Swords card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
9 of Swords
4 of Swords card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
4 of Swords

This is the overthinking spiral. The answer is not to solve every fear at midnight. Pause, lower the noise, and rest before choosing.

Who will like this page?

This page is a good fit for beginners who want recognizable tarot scenes, readers who like quick practical meanings, and collectors who want to preview the style before buying or studying more deeply. It may be less exciting for someone who wants a complete visual gallery on this exact page, or someone who prefers highly abstract art.

My honest take: Tarot The Complete Kit — the Dennis Fairchild deck many readers also know as Tarot Nova — feels like tarot at the kitchen table. It is reflective without being heavy, symbolic without being confusing, and useful for small readings that still matter.

Work and worth

7 of Pentacles card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
7 of Pentacles
9 of Pentacles card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
9 of Pentacles
Page of Pentacles card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
Page of Pentacles
King of Wands card from the Tarot The Complete Kit deck
King of Wands

This strip says patience is not the same as doing nothing. Review what is growing, value your progress, learn the next skill, and lead with confidence.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Direct, practical tarot language makes the page useful for daily pulls. The current TarotFans gallery is an honest 51-card partial set, not a complete 78-card gallery.
Recognizable Rider-Waite-Smith structure helps beginners connect with the meanings. Readers looking for a dramatic fantasy world may find the style too simple.
Good for journaling, study notes, and small grounded spreads. Some suits and court cards are incomplete in the available visual archive.
The archive format works well as a quick preview before buying or studying deeper. It is more practical than flashy, which may not suit every collector.

Final Thoughts

Tarot The Complete Kit works because it keeps tarot close to daily life. It does not need to feel huge to be useful. A small pull can still point toward rest, action, care, repair, patience, or a better question.

If you want a practical deck page for quick reference and grounded study, this review has a clear purpose. Just remember the gallery count is partial, and use the video plus the available cards together for the best sense of the deck.

Tarot The Complete Kit GPT Image 2 product box lifestyle image

Tarot The Complete Kit FAQ

Is the Tarot The Complete Kit gallery complete?

No. This TarotFans page currently shows 51 available card images in the native gallery for Tarot The Complete Kit / Tarot Nova. I keep that count honest so the review does not make a false all-card claim.

Is Tarot The Complete Kit beginner-friendly?

Yes. The available cards use clear tarot structure and easy-to-read emotional cues, so beginners can connect the images to classic meanings without feeling lost.

What kind of readings does this deck suit best?

I like it most for daily one-card pulls, three-card check-ins, journaling prompts, and small practical spreads about choices, feelings, rest, money, and next steps.

Does this review replace the YouTube flip-through?

No. The video is preserved for the flip-through experience. The written review adds context, card examples, and reading ideas so the page feels more like a useful deck guide.

Which cards stand out in the available Tarot The Complete Kit archive?

The Fool, 7 of Cups, 2 of Pentacles, Queen of Cups, 4 of Swords, The Tower, and Ace of Pentacles are especially useful samples because they show how direct the deck can be in everyday readings.

Is Tarot The Complete Kit more spiritual or practical?

It can be both, but the strength of this page is practical tarot. The cards are easiest to use when you ask grounded questions and turn the answer into one clear action.