Decide for me — random verdict generator
When you can't pick between two options, let a fair Yes/No/Maybe verdict decide for you. The verdict is weighted (45% Yes, 45% No, 10% Maybe), one tap, instant. Pairs naturally with "what should I eat tonight" or "what should I do this weekend" — the verdict format reframes the question and your gut reaction tells you the rest. "Decide for me" / "decide for me wheel" / "decide for me yes or no" all land here. It's Saturday and you've been scrolling food apps for fifteen minutes deciding between cooking pasta or ordering Thai. Reframe it: "should I order Thai? Yes/No/Maybe." Tap Tell Me. The verdict lands. If you feel a small disappointment when it says No, you wanted Thai; order Thai. If you feel relief, you wanted pasta; cook pasta. The tool surfaces what you actually wanted under the deliberation. For a true binary "either is fine" decision (Pizza or Burgers, this restaurant or that one), Coin Flip with custom labels fits better — pure 50/50 between two named options. For a "should I do X" question where you want a Yes/No/Maybe verdict reframing the choice, this tool fits. Either way, no signup, nothing logged, no record of what you were deciding.
Frequently asked questions
When should I use Coin Flip instead?
When you have two specific named options between which you're truly indifferent — Pizza or Burgers, the red shirt or the blue one. Coin Flip's binary 50/50 with custom labels handles that cleanly. Use Decide for me when the question is shaped as "should I" and you want the gut-reaction reframing the verdict format gives you.
Why Yes/No/Maybe instead of just Yes/No?
The Maybe (10% probability) is the escape valve for genuinely borderline questions — when neither Yes nor No is the right answer because the question itself isn't well-formed yet. Most decisions that hit Maybe deserve another minute of thought before re-rolling. The 45/45/10 weighting keeps the tool decisive in practice.
Can I use this for big decisions, or only small ones?
Small ones. The tool is for low-stakes everyday choices where the cost of either answer is low. Anything financial, medical, legal, or relationship-serious deserves real research and conversation, not a random verdict. The point is to externalize a decision you have already mentally pre-committed to either side of.
Does it remember the verdict if I bookmark the page?
Each tap of Tell Me draws a fresh independent verdict. There is no remembered state across sessions — opening the page tomorrow gives a fresh blank picker, not yesterday's verdict. If you want a specific verdict pinned for a discussion, screen-record the tap or screenshot the result; otherwise every visit is a clean draw.
More ways to use the Yes or No:
← Yes or No overview