ZonoTools
//Truth or Dare Wheel

Truth or Dare Wheel — Slice-Based Party Flow

Manage Items

Add options to include in the wheel.

Current items (6)

Truth
Dare
Skip
Wildcard
Pick neighbor
Everyone plays
Tap Spin Wheel to draw a random option.

How to use

  1. Negotiate intensity boundaries before renaming spicy wildcard slices.
  2. Pair this wheel with a separate notebook or doc housing actual prompts you approve.
  3. Spin categories first, then read prompts aloud—keeps pacing theatrical yet accountable.
  4. Use Recent Results if playful disputes erupt about whether someone already spun Dare twice.
  5. Offer sober-friendly substitutions by editing slices into mime rounds or trivia categories.

FAQ

How is this different from your Truth or Dare tool?

The standalone Truth or Dare experience ships curated prompts; this wheel only randomizes high-level categories so hosts supply bespoke challenges.

Is content moderated?

No—everything on slices is user-authored; keep gatherings lawful and consensual.

Can minors play?

Only with guardian-approved prompts—rename slices and prompts accordingly before handing over devices.

Is gameplay uploaded?

No server telemetry captures spins; outcomes remain local like other hub variants.

Truth or dare wheel pacing

A truth or dare wheel separates category chaos (“Truth!”) from creative labor (“ask this question”), letting hosts rehearse spicy banks offline while guests only see the theatrical spin.

What is a truth or dare wheel?

Same arc geometry as classroom wheels—pointer picks exactly one slice—but semantics emphasize social risk, wildcard remixes, and optional penalty mechanics groups negotiate beforehand.

Because categories—not sentences—live on slices, cultures can localize gameplay faster than swapping entire prompt packs.

Key features

  • Double-truth and wildcard presets illustrating advanced rule variants improv groups adore.
  • Rapid slice edits between rounds when vibes shift from wholesome to chaotic responsibly.
  • Recent Results doubling as improv proof when storytellers contradict each other humorously.
  • Mobile-first controls ideal for passing phones in circles without dripping beverages on keyboards.

Common use cases

  • Cabin retreats establishing respectful escalation ladders night-by-night.
  • ESL classrooms practicing conversational bravery with teacher-approved question banks.
  • Streaming cohosts randomizing segment formats mid-broadcast.

Best practices

  • Stock water and opt-out phrases visibly near the spinner to reinforce consent culture.
  • Rotate narrator duties so one charismatic guest does not dominate interpretations.
  • Clock spins so rounds stay brisk—analysis paralysis kills comedy momentum.
  • Archive homemade prompt PDFs separately; this tool never stores them automatically.