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YesOrNot

https://yesornot.net/

Spin the wheel. Get a Yes or No. Stop overthinking.

Decision fatigue kills momentum. Whether it's picking lunch or settling a debate, tiny choices pile up and drain your energy. YesOrNot.net gives you a free, instant spin-the-wheel tool that spits out a random Yes or No answer — so you stop overthinking and start doing.
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You Spend More Time Deciding Than Doing - Here's Your Fix

Let's be honest. You've wasted 20 minutes today deciding something that didn't deserve 20 seconds. Lunch. The gym. Whether to reply to that message. It's absurd, but it's real.

YesOrNot.net is a dead-simple web tool. Type your question, spin a wheel, get an answer. Yes or No. Done.

No signup. No app download. No data stored. You close the tab, everything vanishes.

How It Actually Works

Four steps. That's it.

  1. Type your question into the input field so you're clear on what you're asking.
  2. Enter your options - one per line. Default is Yes and No, but you can add whatever you want.
  3. Hit the spin button in the center of the wheel or below the input box.
  4. Read the result. The wheel stops on a random option. Decision made.

The whole thing takes about five seconds. Compare that to the spiral of indecision you were about to enter.

It's Not Just Yes or No

Here's where it gets interesting. The wheel isn't locked to binary choices. You can punch in names for a random draw, cities for your next trip, or menu items when nobody can agree on dinner. Each line in the input box becomes a slice on the wheel.

Think of it as a customizable random picker wearing a Yes/No costume.

Privacy That's Actually Private

No accounts. No cookies tracking your existential questions. YesOrNot.net stores zero data. The moment you close the page, every question and option you entered disappears. They say it, and the design backs it up - there's nothing to sign into in the first place.

Who Is This For?

Anyone drowning in micro-decisions. Groups that can't agree. Teachers picking students. Friends settling bets. Couples choosing restaurants.

It's also weirdly useful for breaking analysis paralysis on bigger calls. Sometimes you spin the wheel, see the answer, and your gut immediately tells you whether you agree or not. That reaction? That's the real answer. The wheel just forced it out of you.

Why Not Just Flip a Coin?

You could. But a spinning wheel with color and motion hits different. It adds a tiny moment of suspense that makes the result feel more decisive. Plus, a coin can't handle five options at once.

Frequently Asked Questions