ZonoTools
//Yes No Wheel

Yes No Wheel — Maybe Included

Manage Items

Add options to include in the wheel.

Current items (2)

Yes
No
Tap Spin Wheel to draw a random option.

How to use

  1. Rename slices to match your tone—softened language for kids, blunt wording for adults-only rooms.
  2. Ensure at least two slices remain so spins stay meaningful even if you temporarily hide maybe outcomes.
  3. Treat outputs as nudges—pause before betting finances or relationships on a single spin.
  4. Use Recent Results when friends forget whether the last spin already committed them.
  5. Swap wildcard slices when mood shifts mid-party without reloading the page.

FAQ

What is a yes/no wheel?

A compact lucky wheel emphasizing affirmative, negative, and ambiguous answers—great for icebreakers when everyone accepts playful randomness.

Can I force pure 50/50 yes/no?

Delete every other slice until only Yes and No remain; duplicates still adjust odds if you need weighted encouragement.

Is this cryptographically secure?

No—it uses casual browser RNG suitable for games, not cryptography or compliance draws.

Does it upload prompts?

No server ingestion occurs; phrases remain inside your session tab.

Yes no wheel icebreakers

A yes/no wheel compresses social friction into a laugh: someone asks a low-stakes question, the group spins, and laughter replaces lengthy deliberation—provided everyone opted into whimsy first.

What is a yes/no wheel?

Same spinner UX as classroom variants but vocabulary emphasizes polarity plus deliberate ambiguity (“maybe”, “ask again”) so metaphysical thinkers stay entertained.

Because arcs resolve mechanically, friends debating taco toppings reach closure faster than recursive polls inside chat threads.

Key features

  • Maybe and wildcard presets illustrating how nuance survives binary framing.
  • Friendly defaults editable before handing phones around a campfire circle.
  • Recent Results preventing endless “best two-out-of-three” spirals—unless your culture loves them.
  • Responsive layout sized for one-thumb operation at crowded bars.

Common use cases

  • Party warmups before deeper truth-or-dare adjacency but lighter stakes.
  • Classroom discussions modeling probability language with elementary students.
  • Writers needing absurd constraint prompts—rename slices into stylistic experiments.

Best practices

  • Establish veto norms up front so anxious participants can tap out gracefully.
  • Translate idioms carefully when multilingual friends join—literal translations sometimes invert humor.
  • Balance slices emotionally so “No” arcs do not dominate shy participants psychologically.
  • Pair spins with timers when outcomes imply immediate action (“Yes” means start singing now).