Dinner Spinner Wheel – What Should I Eat Tonight?
Can't decide what's for dinner? Spin the free dinner spinner wheel and let it pick what to eat tonight. Add your meals, spin once, and end the debate.
Table of contents
Let the wheel decide what's for dinner#
The dinner spinner wheel answers the most exhausting question of the day: what should I eat tonight? Add the meals or restaurants you're torn between, give it a spin, and one lands. No more staring into the fridge, no more "I don't mind, you pick" going back and forth for twenty minutes. The wheel decides so you don't have to.
How to use the dinner spinner#
- Add your options, one per line — meals you can cook, takeout spots, cuisines, whatever's on the table.
- Spin. The wheel lands on tonight's dinner at random.
- Don't love it? Spin again, or commit and start cooking.
No account, no download, nothing saved. Refresh and your list is gone.
End the "I don't know, what do you want?" loop#
That nightly negotiation isn't really indecision — it's decision fatigue. By dinnertime you've made hundreds of small choices and your brain is done. Handing one low-stakes call to a random spin frees you from agonizing over something that genuinely doesn't matter much. For why outsourcing small decisions actually works, see why letting chance decide beats a 50/50 toss.
What to put on your wheel#
A few ways people set theirs up:
- Weeknight rotation: Your 8–10 go-to dinners, so you stop defaulting to the same three.
- Takeout night: The five spots you keep cycling between.
- Picky-eater peace treaty: Only meals the whole family will actually eat, so the wheel can't lose.
- Cuisine roulette: Italian, Thai, Mexican, Indian — pick the type, then decide the dish.
Make your favorites come up more often#
If pizza should win more often than salad, you don't want pure 50/50 odds. The weighted decision wheel lets you give each meal a bigger or smaller slice, so your favorites are more likely to land while the result stays a surprise.
Cook tonight, or order in?#
Sometimes the real question isn't what to eat but whether you're cooking at all. For that single yes-or-no call, the yes or no wheel settles it in one spin — then bring the winners back here to pick the actual meal.

Leo Voss
Leo Voss is a game developer focused on randomness, probability, and replayable systems, creating fast-paced games where chance drives tension, variety, and smart strategy.
