Settle a debate — random Yes/No for groups
Friend group split on a small question? Tap once for a Yes/No/Maybe verdict and move on. Best for casual disputes (which movie, where to eat, who is right about a trivia point), not anything important. "Settle a debate" / "settle an argument" / "settle a debate for me" all land here. Six people in a group chat, three want sushi for dinner, three want pizza. Instead of a re-vote that will just produce the same 3-3 split, agree to the verdict before tapping: "if it's Yes, sushi; if it's No, pizza; Maybe, we vote again." Open the page, tap once, screenshot the verdict, send it to the chat. The discussion ends in under a minute. Pre-committing to a random outcome removes the social cost of one person changing their position under pressure. Everyone signs up to a fair process, the verdict resolves cleanly, the discussion ends. Casual social use only — debates that need actual evidence (factual questions with real answers) deserve looking up, not a verdict. No tracking, no signup, no record of what was being argued.
Frequently asked questions
Why should the group agree on the verdict ahead of time?
Agreeing first removes the temptation to litigate after the fact ("the picker said No, but the No was unfair, let's re-vote"). When everyone signed up to the random outcome before the flip, the result is procedurally legitimate even if individuals didn't get their preferred answer. It also takes the social pressure off whichever individuals would have felt obligated to change their vote.
What if the verdict is Maybe?
Re-tap. Maybe is the 10% escape valve for genuinely borderline cases. If the picker lands Maybe, the group either re-taps for a fresh draw or treats it as "keep discussing." Either is fine. The 45/45/10 weighting means most rounds resolve to Yes or No; Maybe is rare enough to be a meaningful signal when it does land.
Is this for political or important debates?
No. This is for casual social disputes where the cost of either outcome is low — which restaurant, which movie, who is buying the next round. Political, ethical, or factual debates where one side is actually right shouldn't be settled by a random verdict. Look up the answer or have the conversation; don't outsource it.
Can I send a screenshot of the result as proof to the group?
Yes. The verdict displays large enough to screenshot cleanly. Send the screenshot to the group chat as the canonical record of the verdict. The page itself doesn't store any history — each tap is independent — so the screenshot is the artifact that makes the result reviewable later if anyone questions it.
More ways to use the Yes or No:
← Yes or No overview