NamesOnWheel
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Decision wheel as a feeling-finder

The most useful side effect of decision wheels has nothing to do with the random outcome itself. The 4-6 second deceleration creates a brief mental window where you're forced to imagine each outcome being chosen — and your brain immediately starts rooting for one. By the time the wheel stops, you usually know what you actually wanted. Whether you go with the wheel's answer or not, you walk away with new information.

Common yes-no questions people spin

For multi-option decisions, see the dinner wheel, the team generator, or start with Quick Presets and customize the entries yourself.

How to use this picker

  1. 1

    Confirm the question in your head

    The wheel works best for binary decisions you've already framed clearly. Vague questions produce vague decisions.

  2. 2

    Tap Spin

    The 4-second spin with audible tick gives you a moment to flinch — the flinch tells you which answer you actually wanted.

  3. 3

    Honor the result, or notice the resistance

    If you immediately hate the answer, you've learned what you actually wanted. Decision wheels are great therapists.

Frequently asked questions

Is the yes/no wheel really 50/50?
Yes. With two equal-weight entries, crypto.getRandomValues + rejection sampling produces exactly 0.5 probability for each. You can verify this on the Fairness page — set segments to 2, run 100,000 spins, and the chi-square p-value will sit comfortably above 0.05.
Can I add a 'maybe' or 'try smaller version' option?
Yes. Just edit the names list — add as many options as you want, with any weighting. Use the Quick Presets button for common gray-zone sets like 'Yes / No / Maybe' or 'Do it / Don't / Try a smaller version / Sleep on it'.
Why use a wheel instead of just flipping a coin?
Three reasons. (1) Visual: the wheel's deceleration gives you a brief 'flinch moment' where your gut reveals what you actually wanted. (2) Verifiable: a coin flip is unverifiable; this wheel's randomness is independently testable. (3) Repeatable: you can save and share the same decision wheel with friends or future-you.
Can I weight 'yes' more than 'no' (or vice versa)?
Yes — append '*N' to a line. 'Yes *3' makes Yes three times as likely. Useful when you've already 90% decided but want a small chance to be talked out of it.
Does it work for two-option ad-hoc decisions?
Especially well. The default wheel ships with Yes/No so you can spin in literally one tap from the home page. For more complex decisions, save your custom wheel via the share dialog.
Are decision wheels actually useful, or just fun?
Both. Behavioral economists call this the 'preference-revealing' use of randomness — your reaction to the random outcome reveals your true preference. The wheel here is intentionally slow enough (4-6s) that you have time to notice that reaction. It's a serious tool disguised as a toy.

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