Birth time and patterns
Birth time can add the hour pillar to a BaZi chart, which may affect timing and nuance. DayRoot lets users mark birth time as unknown and keeps the reading lighter where missing information matters.
Search intent: Users who want to try DayRoot but are unsure whether exact birth time is required.
Boundary: DayRoot is for reflection and entertainment. It is not medical, legal, financial, psychological, safety, or deterministic relationship advice.
Why birth time matters
Traditional BaZi uses four pillars: year, month, day, and hour. The hour pillar can add nuance around timing, later-life themes, and how the pattern expresses itself.
For relationship reflection, the hour can sharpen the reading, but it is not the only meaningful part of the chart.
What if you do not know the exact time?
DayRoot allows users to mark birth time as unknown. The product can still generate a first look, but it avoids pretending the missing hour is known.
This is important: a reflective product should name uncertainty instead of hiding it behind confident language.
How to use approximate information
If you know an approximate birth time, use the closest honest option. If you truly do not know, choose unknown.
The result should be treated as a reflective starting point. If the language feels useful, you can still explore your archetype, report, and Relationship Map.
Related questions
Short answers.
Do I need exact birth time to use DayRoot?+
No. Exact birth time can add nuance, but DayRoot supports unknown birth time for a lighter first look.
Will an unknown birth time make the result wrong?+
It makes part of the chart less certain. DayRoot handles that by keeping the interpretation lighter where the missing hour would matter.
Should I guess?+
Use the closest honest information you have. If you do not know, marking the time as unknown is better than pretending certainty.
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