Yes/No Decision Maker

Press the button (or hit Space) and let the app “think” before it chooses Yes or No. Tilt the odds with a slider, rename the answers, and run best-of rounds when the stakes feel high.

Decision Settings

0% = guaranteed No, 100% = guaranteed Yes.

Result

Ready when you are.

    Bias: 50% Yes

    Best of: Single decision

    Prompt: (none)

    Recent Decisions

    Keeps the last eight calls so you can remember how often you accepted or declined.

    No decisions yet.

    How to Use the Yes/No Decision Maker

    1. Set the Yes Bias slider to reflect how willing you are to accept the proposal. Leave it at 50% for a fair toss.
    2. Optionally rename the answers (e.g., “Go outside” vs “Stay in”) and add a short prompt describing the dilemma.
    3. Choose a Best Of mode if you prefer multiple trials—best of 3, 5, or 7 gives a stronger consensus.
    4. Press Ask the Tool or hit the space bar. A short “thinking” animation plays before the verdict appears.
    5. Review the breakdown beneath the result and scroll through history to see previous calls, prompts, and biases.

    Features Built for Quick Decisions

    • Bias Slider: Slide between 0% and 100% to nudge outcomes toward “Yes” or “No” when you already lean one way.
    • Thinking Animation: A brief suspense moment keeps meetings or streams fun and gives everyone time to drumroll.
    • Custom Labels & Prompts: Rename the choices for clarity and store the question in the log for later review.
    • Best-of Rounds: Let the app play referee by running multiple decisions and reporting the scorecard.
    • History & Keyboard Shortcuts: The last eight decisions stay on screen, and Space triggers the next roll hands-free.

    Decision-Making Tips

    Use the slider as a gut-check. If you keep dragging toward 80% Yes, you probably already know what you want. The tool converts that feeling into a transparent number so teammates see how much bias you introduced. When working with a group, agree on the bias beforehand and show the slider, then let the randomizer take the blame for whichever answer appears.

    Best-of rounds reduce the chance of a single unlucky flip deciding something expensive—perfect for “Should we ship on Friday?” or “Do we book the venue?” prompts. The history section doubles as light documentation. During brainstorming sessions, leave the page open next to the Decision Wheel or Coin Flip so you can escalate from binary choices to multi-option wheels when needed.

    Examples & Use Cases

    Remote teams use this tool during stand-ups to settle volunteer tasks. Couples use it to decide “cook vs. takeout” with a 60/40 bias toward what they secretly prefer. Streamers let chat see the thinking animation before revealing whether a challenge is accepted. Educators ask the class to propose pros and cons, then lock in a best-of-5 decision. Because everything runs locally, there is no login, tracking, or data upload—just honest randomness with a dash of drama.