Type the question you keep circling, choose whether the odds should be balanced or weighted, and get one clean answer for a low-stakes binary decision.
The slider changes the odds before the generator chooses. At 50/50, YES and NOPE are equally likely, which is best for a clean tie-breaker. At 70/30 lean-yes, every click gives YES a 70 percent chance and NOPE a 30 percent chance, which fits choices where saying yes makes practical sense but you still want a little friction. At 90/10 lean-no, NOPE is heavily favored, which is useful when the safe default is no but a small part of you wants a chance-based exception.
Use the generator when speed matters more than ceremony. It works well for quick text replies, group chat tie-breakers, classroom quick polls, and hands-busy decisions where a single button is easier than setting up a wheel or quiz. The best questions are concrete and low-stakes: should we order food now, should I reply tonight, should this group pick option A, or should the next classroom prompt be yes or no.
The generator is the fastest format on YesOrNope: type, click, read. The yes-or-no wheel is better when people want to watch the decision happen. For suspense, group visibility, and a more social reveal, use the wheel. For mobile ergonomics, repeated clicks, and private decisions, use the generator. Both can answer the same kind of binary question, but they create different moments around the answer.
A result is most useful when you treat your reaction as part of the decision. If YES appears and you feel relief, the click may have surfaced what you already wanted. If NOPE appears and you immediately want to reject it, that reaction is also information. For low-stakes choices, act and move on. For anything involving money, health, safety, consent, legal rights, or another person in a serious way, use the generator only as a prompt to slow down and think.
Write the question so the result can be acted on immediately. "Should I go to the gym before dinner?" is better than "Should I be healthier?" because YES and NOPE both point to a concrete next move. If the question is vague, rewrite it as one action, one timeframe, and one decision owner. The generator is faster when the question is already sharp. The saved history stays in this browser, so it is useful for repeat personal choices without creating an account.
Yes. The generator uses Web Crypto randomness in the browser, then applies your selected probability or Maybe mode.
Yes. Open the bias settings and move the slider toward YES or NOPE. A 70 percent YES setting means each click has a 70 percent chance of YES and a 30 percent chance of NOPE.
Yes. It keeps the last 20 results in localStorage with timestamps and question text. You can hide the panel or clear it at any time.
Random trials are independent. A YES result does not make the next click more likely to be NOPE, so streaks can happen even when the odds are balanced.
Yes. After a result appears, the share control creates a /generator?q=...&r=... URL that opens with the question and result already visible.