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Yes or No

This yes or no tool settles a quick decision with a fair, random answer. Type your question, tap the button, and you'll get a yes or a no, drawn from your browser's cryptographic random source so it's an even call. Turn on the maybe option for a three-way pick, and watch the running tally and history build as you go. It's free, private, and runs on your device, so it's perfect for low-stakes choices, games, or a gut check.

  • Fair 50/50
  • Optional maybe
  • Running tally
  • Percentages
  • Answer history

Last updated June 17, 2026 Even, fair odds Reviewed by the Calcowa team

Answer
Yes tap to ask
0
Yes
0%
0
No
0%
0
Maybe
0%
Recent answers
The basics

How does a yes or no generator decide?

A yes or no pick is a fair coin in words: two equally likely outcomes, chosen at random. This tool asks your browser's cryptographic random source for a value and maps it evenly to yes or no, with no lean either way. Turn on the maybe option and it splits three ways instead, each a one-in-three chance. Every tap is independent, so a run of one answer never changes the next, and as your tally grows the percentages drift toward an even split. That randomness is the whole point: it breaks a tie you can't break yourself, and the gut reaction you feel at the answer often tells you what you were really hoping for.

yes = 50% , no = 50%
Step by step

Getting an answer, step by step

Here's the quick routine for a fast decision:

  1. 1

    Ask your questionType it in if you like, or just keep it in your head.

  2. 2

    Pick the modeLeave it as yes or no, or turn on maybe for three.

  3. 3

    Tap askYou'll get a fair answer drawn at random.

  4. 4

    Read your gutNotice your reaction; it's often the real answer.

Quick reference

The odds by mode

Each answer is equally likely, so the odds depend only on how many options are in play.

ModeOptionsChance each
Yes or noYes, No50%
With maybeYes, No, Maybe33.3%
Two questions4 combinations25%
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

You tap the button and it gives you a yes or a no, drawn from your browser's cryptographic random source so there's no pattern and no bias. Each answer is an even chance, and the tool keeps a running tally with the percentages and a history of recent answers. You can type your question first if you want, and turn on a maybe option for a third outcome. It all runs on your device, so you'll get a fair answer the moment you tap.

Yes, it's a fair coin-style call. The pick comes from the browser's crypto random generator, which is built for unpredictability and is stronger than the basic random function many scripts use. With the maybe option off, yes and no each get 50 percent; turn maybe on and the three split evenly. Each tap is independent, so a string of yeses doesn't make a no any more likely on the next one.

It's best for low-stakes choices, like where to eat, which task to start, or who goes first, where any answer is fine and you just want to stop dithering. Many people also use the gut-check trick: ask the question, see the answer, and notice your reaction. If you're disappointed by a no, that tells you what you actually wanted, which makes the tool useful even when you ignore its pick.

You can. Flip on the maybe switch and the tool answers yes, no, or maybe, each with an equal one-in-three chance. It's handy when a flat yes or no feels too strict, or for games and prompts where a maybe keeps things open. Turn it back off any time to return to a clean two-way call, and the tally tracks whichever mode you're in.

It does. Every tap adds to the running count of yes, no, and maybe answers, and shows the percentage each has come up so far. Over many taps those percentages settle toward an even split, which is the long-run balance of a fair pick. The recent-answers strip lets you scan the last several at a glance, and you can reset the tally to start a fresh round whenever you like.

Yes, it's completely free, with no sign-up and no limit on how many times you ask. It runs entirely in your browser, so it's fast and private, and nothing you type or tap is sent anywhere. Bookmark it for quick decisions, party games, or a classroom prompt, and you'll have a fair yes or no ready in a tap whenever you're stuck on a call.

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