Yes or No?

The fastest decision in town. Type your question, press the button, accept the answer of the universe.

A yes or no generator is a free digital coin flip that delivers an instant random binary answer using cryptographic randomness — the same standard used in security keys. It gives a true 50/50 result with no bias, no memory of previous answers, and no pattern to game. Enable Maybe mode for a three-way outcome.

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Common uses

When 50/50 is enough.

🍕 Should I…?

Order takeout. Skip the gym. Text first. The yes/no will tell you what your gut already knows.

🎲 Settling debates

Two people, one disagreement, no time to argue. Let randomness break the tie.

📝 Brainstorming

"Is this idea worth pursuing?" Sometimes a quick yes/no is what you need to commit or move on.

🎮 Game decisions

D&D, party games, pranks. Add chaos to any game with a fair coin flip.

Why FairPick

Yes or No Generator — A Smarter Coin Flip

A yes or no generator is the digital version of flipping a coin — except faster, always available, and with a streak tracker so you can see how your luck is running. The decision is made using your browser's crypto.getRandomValues() function, which gives a genuine 50/50 split with no bias in either direction. Ask the same question a thousand times and the answers will be roughly equal — because the randomness is real.

When to Use a Yes or No Decision Maker

The yes or no generator works best for decisions you've been avoiding — not because you don't know the answer, but because you don't want to commit to it. When the answer appears on screen, notice how you react. If you feel immediate disappointment at "No," that reaction is the real answer. The generator just forced you to stop deliberating and react honestly. Many people find that the tool rarely tells them what to do; it tells them what they already wanted to do.

For genuinely undecided situations — where either outcome is fine — activate "Include Maybe" for a three-way split. This is useful for anything where a non-answer is acceptable: "Should I start that project today?" Maybe means tomorrow is fine too. The streak tracker shows your recent string of answers, which is useful for games, D&D decisions, and any situation where you're running multiple yes/no checks in sequence.

Yes or No Wheel vs Yes or No Generator

Prefer something visual? FairPick's spin the wheel tool with just "Yes" and "No" entered works identically — same cryptographic randomness, same 50/50 odds, but with the animated wheel for situations where you want to build anticipation or show others the result. The yes or no generator is faster; the wheel is more theatrical. Use whichever fits the moment.

Questions

About the answer machine.

Is this just a coin flip?

Functionally, yes — a 50/50 between "yes" and "no" using your browser's cryptographically-strong random source. But unlike a real coin, you don't have to find a quarter, and you don't have to bend down to pick it up off the floor.

Why does it sometimes say "Maybe"?

Only if you turn on the "Include Maybe" toggle. In that mode, each answer has a 1/3 chance — yes, no, or maybe. For when life isn't binary.

Are my questions saved or sent anywhere?

Nope. Everything happens in your browser. We don't store, log, or transmit any of your questions. Ask away.

Is asking yes/no questions actually a good way to make decisions?

Honestly? Sometimes yes. The trick is noticing how you feel when the answer comes up. If "no" appears and you're disappointed, that's information — your gut already had a preference. The randomness just helped surface it.