My creativity thus sparked, the result appears in the link below.

Because the polyhedrons in this PDF are dodecahedrons, twelve-sided figures which only double the number of sides a traditional die has, I decided to do a set of divinatory dodecahedrons, each one covering a different subject, so I could tailor the answers to the specific subject. The divinatory dodecahedrons I created are decision-making, desire, destiny-short-term, destiny-long-term, and designs. The Dodecahedron of Decisions and the Dodecahedron of Desire you may consult anytime there is a decision to be made, or you feel a desire and want to know if it’s going to be fulfilled. The Dodecahedron of Destiny/Short-Term I imagine as the kind of thing you may consult in order to know what’s going to happen anywhere from sometime-in-the-next-fifteen minutes to as long as one week into the future. The Dodecahedron of Destiny/Long-Term I think of as the kind of thing you’d be asking about three-to-five years or more into the future, so that one you’d use a lot less often. The Dodecahedron of Designs is the one you want to consult when you’re feeling a little suspicious about the people around you, and you want to either confirm or deny your suspicions.

 You’ll notice the last dodecahedron in this PDF is a blank from another website. After trying the dodecahedrons I created, why not try your hand at creating a dodecahedron yourself? If there’s a specific issue you’re facing,  you need to make a choice among a number of options, you don’t have a pendulum handy, and none of mine will do, you can write all your possible options on a blank dodecahedron, cut it out, assemble it, and give it a toss. Divination can be both art and science. This is one of those occasions where the ‘art’ comes in.