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Random Dare Wheel

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A random dare wheel removes the dead air from truth-or-dare games and keeps energy moving when ideas run dry. Set your intensity — mild, medium, or wild — choose how many dares you need, and spin. The result is a ready-to-use list of challenges tailored to your group's comfort level. Mild works for family nights and mixed-age groups. Medium hits the sweet spot for friend groups who want laughs without anyone feeling ambushed. Wild is for close-knit crowds who've already warmed up and want the kind of dare that gets brought up for years. Generate up to 10 at once to pre-load a full round or fill a dare jar before play even starts.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Select your desired dare intensity — mild, medium, or wild — from the intensity dropdown to match your group.
  2. Set the count field to how many dares you need for the round, up to 10 at a time.
  3. Click the spin button to generate your dares and review the full list in the output panel.
  4. Copy the dares, read them aloud one by one, or paste them into your group chat to kick off the game.

Use Cases

  • Pre-loading a full round of dares before a bachelorette party itinerary kicks off
  • Filling a dare jar for a birthday party by printing and cutting wild-intensity results
  • Running a virtual truth-or-dare round on Zoom or Discord with screen-share
  • Warming up a corporate icebreaker session using mild-intensity physical challenges
  • Keeping a sleepover going past midnight when the group runs out of ideas

Tips

  • Start on medium for a mixed group and only switch to wild once you can read the room — premature wild dares can kill the mood.
  • Generate a batch of 8-10 at the start of the night and use them as a queue so the game never stalls waiting for ideas.
  • For a dare jar, set count to 10, generate two or three times at different intensities, and print all sets for a mixed-difficulty jar.
  • In video call games, filter mentally for dares that work on camera — skip anything requiring physical props the other players can't verify.
  • If a dare lands on someone who genuinely can't do it, regenerate just one dare by setting count to 1 rather than re-rolling the whole list.
  • Combine with a truth generator and alternate rounds to pace the intensity and give players a breather between challenging dares.

FAQ

what's the difference between medium and wild dares

Medium dares are socially awkward but broadly acceptable — impressions, silly stunts, group-friendly antics. Wild dares are more embarrassing and higher-stakes, best for close friend groups who've already loosened up. If you're unsure about the room, start on medium and escalate after a few rounds.

are the mild dares actually safe for kids and family game nights

Yes — mild intensity is designed for mixed-age groups and sticks to harmless physical challenges and silly stunts. Medium and wild introduce socially embarrassing scenarios suited for teens and adults. Keep the intensity selector on mild and you'll be fine with most family crowds.

how do I run truth or dare on a video call without it getting awkward

Generate a batch of dares beforehand and paste them into the chat, or share your screen when you spin. Mild and medium settings include plenty of camera-friendly challenges — impressions, facial expressions, holding up objects — that work well when everyone is sitting at their desk.