Can you use uncommon (not commonly used) Chinese characters to name or rename, such as garbled Chinese characters or Chinese characters with many strokes?
Fundamentally speaking, the meaning of a word is its inner soul, and the strokes of Chinese characters are just shapes. Whoever is named after China's strokes, no matter what tricks you use-Zhouyi, Wu Ge and so on. You have fallen into the fog of probability caused by these tricks ... the probability of good or bad is 50%, and the accuracy of all kinds of tricks named by strokes rarely exceeds 60%.
In Yi-ology, Daoism is the king of numerology, the highest prediction of the Book of Changes, known as the study of emperors, and also a scientific masterpiece of the laws of motion of celestial bodies, people and the earth. The earth's magnetic field is hidden in Daoism. Daoist magic is mainly composed of Yin and Yang, Three Talents, Five Elements, heavenly stems and earthly branches, Four Seasons and Five Directions, Confused Luo, Eight Diagrams and Nine Palaces, Six Gods and Seven Obsidian, Eight Nine Planets, Astronomical Calendar and other subsystems, and the theories of these subsystems are very rigorous. Few people use Daoism and these subsystems to analyze the quality of Chinese character strokes.
Why? Because the strokes of Chinese characters are only shapes, the meaning of words is the soul of Chinese characters. Chinese characters with the same strokes have both positive and negative meanings. How can there be good or bad luck?
So the meaning of Chinese characters and the meaning of Chinese character combinations are the most important. Can't give up the soul (meaning of the word) and care too much about the body (strokes). Of course, you can also refer to the theories of yin and yang, three talents, five elements, cadres and branches, birth and psychology. At the same time, Chinese characters can be named or renamed according to their meanings, five elements and psychological implications. As for the garbled Chinese characters, don't think too much.