Decision Maker
Spin the wheel, flip a coin, roll the dice, or pick at random
Options (6/12)
Click an option name to edit it
Free Online Decision Maker — Spin Wheel, Coin Flip, Dice Roller & Random Picker
Making decisions is hard. Whether you're picking a restaurant, assigning tasks to team members, choosing a winner for a giveaway, or just trying to break a tie between friends, the last thing you want is to spend more time deciding how to decide. The OmniWebKit Decision Maker handles it for you. One tool, four powerful randomizers, zero friction.
The tool offers four modes: a customizable Spin Wheel where you add your own options and let the wheel choose, a Coin Flip that can simulate up to 10 flips at once with a full heads/tails breakdown, a Dice Roller supporting D4 through D100 with up to 8 dice simultaneously, and a Random Item Picker for when you just want the fastest possible answer.
Everything runs entirely in your browser. There's no server involved, no data collected, no sign-up required. Open the tool, make a decision, move on with your day.
How to Use Each Decision Mode
🎡 Spin the Wheel
Add up to 12 custom options in the Options panel on the right. Click any option name to edit it. Hit SPIN and watch the wheel decide. The result is shown below the wheel with the chosen option highlighted. Great for classroom activities, team decisions, food choices, and giveaways.
🪙 Coin Flip
A simple heads-or-tails randomizer. Drag the slider to flip up to 10 coins at once. When flipping multiple coins, you get a full breakdown showing how many heads and tails came up, plus a visual sequence of each flip result. Perfect for quick yes/no decisions or any binary choice.
🎲 Dice Roller
Roll up to 8 dice with your choice of die type: D4, D6, D8, D10, D12, D20, or D100. The total and individual results are displayed after each roll. The rolling animation adds a satisfying randomness feel. Ideal for tabletop games like D&D, Pathfinder, and boardgames.
🎯 Random Picker
Add any list of items — names, tasks, movie titles, anything — and click Pick Random. The picker cycles through options rapidly before landing on the chosen one. Your history of recent choices is saved in the session so you can see past decisions at a glance.
Why Randomness Helps You Make Better Decisions
There's solid psychology behind using a random tool to make decisions. When you're stuck between equally good (or equally bad) options, your brain enters a loop of analysis paralysis — weighing the same factors over and over without making progress. A random outcome breaks the loop. You either accept it, or more interestingly, you notice an emotional reaction to the result.
That reaction is the real information. If the wheel lands on "Option B" and you feel relieved, Option B was probably what you wanted all along. If you feel disappointed, that's equally useful. Randomizers don't take the decision out of your hands — they reveal what decision you were already leaning toward.
This technique is used in coaching and behavioral decision science to help people cut through overthinking. It works just as well for trivial choices (what to eat for lunch) as it does for meaningful ones (which project to prioritize this week).
