Yes or No Decision Maker
Let fate decide. Tap the circle or press the button.
Let fate decide. Tap the circle or press the button.
Stuck between two options? Our Yes or No generator gives you an instant, unbiased answer with a dramatic reveal animation. Unlike flipping a physical coin, this digital decision maker tracks your history of yes, no, and maybe answers so you can spot patterns. It's the fastest way to break indecision and commit to a choice — whether for a trivial question or a genuine dilemma.
A random yes or no works anywhere you need an impartial, instant answer. Here are the main use cases by category.
Use it for the small stuff that still feels heavy: Should I go for a run? Order dessert? Stay in tonight? Text that person back? Sometimes the outcome matters less than the clarity you feel when you see the result — if you're relieved or disappointed, you already knew what you wanted. The tool simply helps you commit.
In the classroom, a random yes/no is ideal for teaching probability — run many trials and compare counts to show 50/50 outcomes. Therapists and coaches sometimes use random decision aids for stress relief: surrendering a low-stakes choice to chance can reduce decision fatigue and anxiety. It's also useful for exposure or behavioral exercises when a neutral "decider" helps clients act without overthinking.
Truth or dare, group picks (who goes first?), or dare questions at a party — a dramatic yes/no reveal keeps things fair and fun. No need for a physical coin; everyone can see the result on screen and the stats row adds a bit of suspense over multiple rounds.
Research in decision psychology suggests that random decision aids are most useful not because of the outcome, but because of your reaction to the outcome. If you flip heads (Yes) and feel relieved, you already knew what you wanted. If you feel disappointed, you know the opposite. The decision maker acts as a mirror for your real preference — a mental trick used by therapists and productivity coaches worldwide.
crypto.getRandomValues() for unbiased results.
crypto.getRandomValues(), the same
cryptographically secure randomness used for security-sensitive applications. Each tap is an
independent 50/50 (or 40/40/20 with Maybe mode) — no bias and no memory of past results.For a classic coin flip, try our Coin Flipper. Need to choose from multiple options? Use Spin the Wheel.