Spin the Wheel

Spin the Wheel

This is the blank canvas of the site. Where the other wheels come pre-loaded with pizza styles or country names, this one starts with whatever you put on it — making it the go-to for any decision that doesn't fit a ready-made category. Whatever choice is nagging you, if you can write the options down, this wheel can settle it.

Put anything on it

Type in your options and they become slices on the wheel. Restaurant choices, chore assignments, movie picks, yes-or-no with a few maybes thrown in, names of friends, prize amounts — if you can list it, you can spin it. That flexibility is why the custom wheel gets the most use over time. The themed wheels are great when they fit, but real life rarely matches a preset list exactly. There's always some choice that's specific to your day, your group, or your problem, and a blank wheel you fill yourself is the only thing that covers all of them.

The everyday decision-maker

Most of the choices that stall us aren't important, they're just annoying. What's for dinner, which task to start first, whose turn it is, which show to watch. A custom wheel turns each of these into a two-second spin. It doesn't make the "right" choice — it makes a choice, which is usually all that was standing between you and moving on with your day. The relief of just having something decided, even arbitrarily, is often bigger than the value of getting the decision exactly right.

Games and party use

A build-your-own wheel is a party in itself. Load it with dares, trivia categories, drink assignments, or forfeits and let it drive the game. Because you write the options, you can tune it to the exact group and mood — mild prompts for a family gathering, spicier ones for a night with friends. It's a game engine you configure in thirty seconds. And because the options are yours, no two groups ever play quite the same game, which keeps it fresh even for people who spin it often. It also travels well — no cards to lose, no board to set up, just a page you open when the group needs a prompt.

Chores, teams, and turn-taking

Households and teams use the custom wheel to make routine fairness effortless. Put everyone's name on it to assign a task, or list the tasks and spin to see what you're doing next. Either framing works, and switching between them keeps a chore rota from feeling stale week after week. The visible randomness heads off the usual "why do I always get the worst one" complaint, because nobody arranged the result. Over time it quietly defuses a lot of small domestic friction. Kids in particular accept a wheel's verdict far more readily than a parent's, since there's obviously no favoritism involved.

Ready-made wheels too

When your decision does match a category, the pre-built wheels save you the typing. The wheel of letters is loaded for word games, the wheel of morning helps plan how to start the day, and the food wheel settles what to eat. All of them work the same way — spin and commit.

How to use it

Add your options, spin, and act on the result. Adjust the settings to remove picked items, change the look, or turn sounds on and off. Your custom wheel saves in the browser, so a setup you use often — weekly chores, a regular game — is ready whenever you come back. Many people end up keeping two or three saved wheels for the recurring decisions in their week.

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