Number Wheel — Spin Digits 1–6 (Customizable)
Manage Items
Add options to include in the wheel.
Current items (6)
Recent Results
Total Spins
0
How to use
- Define whether repeats are fair—duplicate slices if certain digits deserve higher odds.
- Rename slices with larger spans (7–12) when tabletop rules demand polyhedral ranges.
- Spin once per player turn unless house rules explicitly grant rerolls.
- Log streaks via Recent Results when tournaments track cumulative spins across rounds.
- Between unrelated games, reset history so Dungeons night does not inherit trivia leftovers.
FAQ
What is a number wheel?
A lucky wheel whose slices display digits or numeric tokens—functionally similar to dice yet customizable without digging through dice bags.
Is randomness cryptographically secure?
No—it relies on casual browser RNG suitable for games, not crypto keys or compliance audits.
Can I emulate percent chances?
Approximate by duplicating slices representing wins versus misses until ratios feel right visually.
Are spins uploaded?
No server ingestion occurs; digits remain client-side like every hub variant.
Number wheel tabletop helper
A number wheel replaces misplaced dice with something harder to knock off picnic tables—especially helpful when camping, streaming board-game nights, or teaching probability with oversized visuals.
What is a number wheel?
Same spinner engine—Manage Items, Spin Wheel, Recent Results—but slices emphasize integers (or numeric codes) instead of names or slogans.
Educators appreciate projecting arcs while narrating expected value lessons; hobbyists enjoy customizing sci-fi glyph labels atop numeric cores.
Key features
- Dice-inspired presets ready for immediate house-rule tweaks.
- Duplicate-friendly slices enabling weighted distributions without scripting.
- Touch-friendly spins on tablets clipped to DM screens during RPG sessions.
- Offline reliability once assets cache—ideal for cabins or convention halls.
Common use cases
- Rotating initiative among TTRPG players who forgot polyhedral sets at home.
- Coaches assigning drill stations numbered on a gym floor.
- Hackathons drawing booth visitation order among competing teams.
Best practices
- Announce whether zero or decimals belong before editing slices—ambiguous notation confuses auditors.
- Snap photos of final configurations when tournaments publish official odds disclosures.
- Avoid mixing alphanumeric slices unless everyone agrees how sorting resolves ties.
- Pair large-number wheels with zoomed UI accessibility for classrooms using projectors.