Allat – Nabataean mother goddess of fate; depicted with a cornucopia and a turreted crown
Fortuna – Roman goddess of good fortune; she personified luck and spoke through oracles; as Fortuna Redux, the goddess of the fortune that leads back, commemorating the return of Augustus in 19 B.C.
from http://religion.wikia.com/wiki/Fortuna
Ganesha – the gentle Hindu elephant-headed god of good fortune; son of Parvati and Shiva; worshipers invoke him before a journey or beginning an enterprisHo-Ho – Chinese luck twins who attend the god of wealth, Tsai Shen; each twin carries a jar planted with a lotus, the symbol of purity and perfection
Lady Luck – modern version of the ancient goddess of fate and good fortune
Lakshmi – lotus goddess of beauty and good fortune; wife of Vishnu; depicted wearing garlands of lotus blossoms and usually standing on a lotus flower
Meni – Assyrian mother goddess of fate; a lunar deity
Ngolimeno – mother of the spirit people; the Ewe people of Toga, West Africa believed the soul of each unborn child must first visit Ngolimeno who will grant them a happy life if they please her
Seimia – Syrian goddess of fate
Spider Woman – Native American weaver of the web of fate
The Shichi Fukujin – in Japan, the Seven Gods of Luck: Bishamon, Daikoku, Ebisu, Fukurokuju, Hotei, Jorojin, and Benten (the one goddess among the seven); Benten is often depicted riding an ox, the symbol of good fortune; she wears a jeweled diadem, carries a musical instrument, and is associated with geishas
Benten from https://www.kusuyama.jp/blog/culture/shichi-fukujin-seven-gods-of-luck-and-good-fortune
Tyche – Greek deification of the element of risk; source a good or ill luck; often depicted with wings