Random picker wheel to decide anything.

Add names, lunch spots, or any options, spin the wheel, and let it decide fairly. Who presents first, who hosts standup, or where the team eats.

Free · No sign-up · Saved in your browser

AlexJordanSamPriyaTaylorMorgan

Entries

6 / 20

Put each name or option on its own line. Duplicates are ignored. The wheel updates as you type.

From one spin to a daily ritual

Get the team together every morning, without organising it.

Halftime drops a 2-minute game, an icebreaker, and a weekly champion into Slack or Teams each workday. Everyone plays async and no one has to plan a thing.

See how Halftime works

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When to reach for a random picker

Every team has the moment where someone asks “who first?” and everyone looks at their laptop. A spinning wheel short-circuits the awkwardness. Nobody feels singled out because the software made the call, and the visual theatre of a wheel lands lighter than a coin flip.

What to actually use it for

  • Demo order. Turn on “remove winner after each spin” and spin repeatedly. The wheel cycles through the whole team without repeats, giving you a fair running order in under a minute.
  • Who presents the retro action items. Same pattern. One action per person, randomly assigned.
  • Tie-breakers. Two features, three names, whatever. Spin, accept, move on.
  • Fun picks. Who brings snacks to the next social. Where to order lunch. Who cleans the sink. All the decisions that take twenty minutes of polite declining.
  • Who starts the standup. Different person every day shakes up the energy and makes the meeting feel less performative.

Pick who goes next in standup

Drop in your team, spin once, and the wheel picks who kicks off standup. Turn on “remove winner after each spin” and a different person starts every day, so the running order feels fair and nobody gets singled out. It works the same way for picking who presents next, who demos first, or who answers the retro prompt.

Is it really random?

Yes. The winner is chosen with the browser's cryptographic random number generator when available, then the visual rotation is calculated to land on that wedge. Each option has exactly the same odds of being picked, so a team of eight means 1-in-8 each spin. No weighting, no house edge.

Why use a wheel instead of a simple random picker?

Because the spin buys the team a beat of anticipation, and because seeing the wheel slow down with ticking sounds is more fun than a blank result popping up. A shared moment of suspense is the whole point of rolling dice versus flipping a switch.

Is my options list saved?

Only in your browser. The list lives in local storage on your device and never leaves it. If you build a team roster once, it stays for next time. Clear the list with one click whenever you want.