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Decisions

Decide Yes or No

Let chance answer Yes or No.

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Every answer is equally likely — drawn with your browser's secure randomness.

About this tool

Yes or No at a glance

Some decisions just need a nudge. One click on “Decide” gives you a clear Yes or No – and a “Maybe” too, if you want it. Fair, instant and with no endless deliberating.

One click, one clear answer

Tap “Decide” and get an unambiguous Yes or No straight away. If you want to leave a third option open, switch on Maybe mode – then Yes, No and Maybe are all equally likely.

When chance is worth it

In a genuine tie, a neutral nudge often brings clarity faster than long deliberation. The answer comes from your browser's random generator and is therefore unbiased. For weighty questions the result is of course an impulse, not advice.

How to make a gut decision without overthinking

Sometimes what blocks you is not the choice itself but the constant weighing up of two equally good options. That is exactly where chance helps, because it takes the responsibility for the first step off your shoulders. You click, you get a Yes or No, and you notice how the result feels.

Often you realize the moment it appears what you actually wanted. A quick sigh of relief or a slight hesitation tells you more than any pros-and-cons list. So you use the tool not only to decide, but also to make your real leaning visible.

  • Phrase the question as concretely as possible so the answer fits cleanly
  • Pay attention to your first gut reaction instead of clicking again right away
  • Add the “Maybe” option when you are genuinely torn
  • Treat the result as an impulse, not a binding law

Why Yes and No are not always the whole story

A binary result is practical, but not every question squeezes neatly into Yes and No. If you are unsure whether a clear direction exists at all, add the third answer “Maybe”. All three options are then equally likely and reflect an open situation.

That makes sense for questions whose time has not quite come. “Should I start today?” often takes a “Maybe” better than a hard No. Chance is not deciding your life here, it is giving you a neutral nudge. Big questions with real consequences are worth deliberately leaving out and thinking through calmly instead. For the light everyday stuff, a click stays a welcome shortcut.

Use cases

Yes or No in practice

Decide fast

Should I, or shouldn't I? One click is enough.

Everyday life

Settle small questions without an endless debate.

In a group

Give a neutral nudge when everyone is undecided.

On a whim

Second helping? Night out? Let chance answer.

Frequently asked

Yes or No: frequently asked questions

What does Maybe mode do?

It adds “Maybe” as a third option. All three answers are then equally likely.

Is Yes just as likely as No?

Yes. In Yes/No mode each answer sits at exactly 50%.

Can I decide as often as I want?

Yes, as often as you like – no limit and no sign-up.

Are results stored?

No. There is nothing to store – every Yes or No answer is created locally in your browser and is not logged afterwards.

Fancy another result?

Let chance answer Yes or No.

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