Random answer tool

Yes or No Generator

Spin for a quick decision. Get a random Yes, No, or Maybe answer when you want a lightweight prompt instead of another round of overthinking.

Example: Should I take the new job?

Choose mode
Total answers 0
History items 0

Your random answer is

Ready

Type a question or leave it blank, then generate an answer.

Results are random prompts, not advice. History stays in this browser.

How to use the yes or no generator

  1. Type a question if you want the answer saved with context, or leave the field blank for a fast spin.
  2. Choose the standard Yes / No mode for a binary choice, or switch on Maybe when a third result is useful.
  3. Select Generate Answer, press Enter from the question field, or use the keyboard shortcut when focus is outside the field.
  4. Read the result, copy it if needed, then generate again or reset the history.

This yes or no generator works best for low-stakes choices: party games, classroom prompts, quick tie-breakers, small daily decisions, and moments when either answer would be acceptable.

Examples for quick decisions

  • Should I order takeout tonight?
  • Should we start the next game round?
  • Should I pick the first option?
  • Should the class take a quick quiz today?
  • Should I text them now?

Use the history rail when you need several random answers in a row. It can act like a yes no wheel without extra setup, and the counters help you see how many times each answer appeared during the current session.

What the result means

The tool chooses from the active answer set. In Yes / No mode, the possible outputs are Yes and No. In Yes / No / Maybe mode, Maybe is added as a neutral result for questions that do not need a hard answer.

The animation is only a visual cue. The actual answer is selected in the browser when you generate, then shown in the result stage and added to the recent history list. Copy Result uses the current question and answer, while Copy History uses the visible history list.

When a random answer helps

A random yes or no generator is useful when the decision is reversible, playful, or already close enough that either option is fine. It can break a deadlock during a game, choose a classroom warm-up, settle a light debate, or replace a coin flip with a clearer on-screen answer.

For important choices, treat the result as a prompt to think, not a command to follow. If a question involves money, health, safety, work, relationships, or another serious outcome, pause and review the real facts before acting.

Why keep the tool simple?

This yes or no generator is intentionally small: one optional question, one mode switch, one answer, and a short result history. That makes it faster than building a custom wheel for a single choice and clearer than using a busy randomizer when you only need Yes, No, or Maybe.

The yes or no generator also keeps each answer easy to copy. If you are running a meeting, class activity, stream game, or group chat, you can generate a result, copy the current answer, and move on without saving an account or configuring a long list of options.

Because the yes or no generator stays focused, it is easy to explain to a group: ask the question, choose the answer set, generate once, and use the result as a playful nudge.

Privacy and local history

Questions and results are handled in your browser. This page does not need an account, upload, or server request to generate an answer. The short history is stored locally so it can remain available if you refresh the page on the same device.

Limitations to review

The result is random and should not be treated as expert guidance. The yes or no spinner cannot judge context, risk, timing, or consequences. Use it for lightweight decisions and review any answer before using it for something important.

FAQ

The tool uses browser randomness to choose from the active answer set. It is suitable for casual decisions, games, and quick prompts, but it should not be used as proof or expert judgment.

Yes. Switch to Yes / No / Maybe mode when a neutral answer would be helpful. The result stage and counters will include Maybe for that session.

No. The question field is optional. Leaving it blank gives you a simple random answer, while typing a question makes the copied result and history easier to understand later.

It serves the same purpose as a yes no wheel or yes no picker wheel, but the interface keeps the controls compact and focuses on the answer, history, and copy actions.

Yes. The layout is designed for phones, tablets, and desktop screens. On small screens the question, mode switch, action button, result, and history stack in task order.

The page keeps a short local history in the browser on your device. Use Reset History if you want to clear the saved questions and answers.