Fun
Dare Task Spinner
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
The dare task spinner gives your group a neutral, instant dare challenge without anyone having to play villain by writing or assigning tasks. Set the intensity once — mild, medium, or spicy — and everyone faces the same impartial randomizer. No prep, no accusations of rigging, no awkward negotiations mid-game. Mild works for mixed-age family gatherings and younger players; medium hits the sweet spot for close friend groups; spicy is built for adventurous adults who want real stakes. The spinner handles pacing too — just read the dare, give the person 30 seconds, then pass the phone to whoever's next.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Open the intensity dropdown and select mild, medium, or spicy based on your group's age and comfort level.
- Click the Spin button to generate a completely random dare task for the current player.
- Read the dare aloud to the group and give the player a set time limit — 30 to 60 seconds works well.
- Once completed (or penalized for skipping), pass the device to the next player and spin again.
Use Cases
- •Running mild-intensity dare rounds at a teen sleepover where parents are nearby
- •Keeping energy up between rounds of a bachelorette party itinerary using the spicy setting
- •Spinning dares over a Discord call for a virtual game night with friends in different cities
- •Adding penalty rounds to a board game night when someone loses a challenge
- •Breaking the ice at a college dorm party with a mix of people who don't know each other well
Tips
- →Lock the intensity level before the game starts — switching mid-game after seeing a hard dare is considered cheating in most groups.
- →For mixed groups with both teens and adults, run two separate rounds: one on mild for everyone, one on medium for adults only.
- →Screenshot or copy dares you want to reuse — the spinner doesn't save history, so good ones disappear when you spin again.
- →Pair medium dares with a 30-second timer on your phone to stop players from stalling or overthinking their task.
- →For virtual game nights, designate one host to control the spinner and screen-share so results can't be disputed.
- →If a dare involves another player (e.g., 'call someone'), decide before the game whether that target person must be in the room or if anyone counts.
FAQ
what intensity setting is safe for kids
Use mild for anyone under 13. Mild dares are harmless and silly — think funny faces or impressions — with nothing that could embarrass or pressure a younger player. Medium and spicy are intended for teens and adults respectively, so keep the selector locked on mild for mixed-age or family groups.
can a dare spinner work for an office party without causing problems
Mild and medium are both fine for professional settings. Mild stays completely safe; medium adds light social challenges without anything that could offend a coworker. Skip spicy at workplace events — even close teams have boundaries that are better not tested in a work context.
what should we do if someone refuses a dare
Agree on a refusal penalty before the game starts so there's nothing to argue about mid-round. Common options include answering a truth question instead, losing a point, or sitting out the next turn. Having that rule set in advance keeps the game moving and the energy light.