Yes / No Oracle
Get an instant yes or no answer.
Type a question if you like, then ask the oracle.
Just for fun: the oracle picks an answer at random with your browser’s secure random generator. It cannot predict anything. For real decisions, use it as a nudge — not advice.
How to use Yes / No Oracle
What this tool does
The Yes / No Oracle answers a yes-or-no question with a single, instant response. You type your question (or skip that and just tap the button), the oracle “thinks” for a moment, and an answer appears — usually a clear Yes or No, sometimes a confident “Yes, definitely” or “Probably not”, and occasionally a non-committal “Maybe” or “Ask again”. It is deliberately simple: one question, one tap, one answer.
It is important to be honest about what this is. The oracle does not read your question, analyse it, or predict anything. Each answer is picked at random using your browser’s secure random generator. It is a digital version of flipping a coin and giving it a friendly voice — a bit of fun, not a forecast.
When you would use it
Most decisions deserve real thought, but plenty of them genuinely do not. Should you have tea or just get back to work? Take the scenic route home? Order the same lunch as yesterday? When the two outcomes barely differ, asking the oracle is faster and lighter than agonising over it — and it can be oddly clarifying. People often notice their own reaction to the answer (“no, I actually wanted yes”), and that reaction is the real signal.
It also works as a small game. Hand the device around a group, let everyone ask something silly, and enjoy the answers. It is a gentle ice-breaker and a way to settle a friendly 50/50 argument without anyone feeling hard done by.
How to use it
- Type your yes-or-no question in the box if you want it shown with the answer. This step is optional.
- Press Ask the oracle.
- Wait for the brief “thinking” moment, then read the answer.
- Press Ask again for a fresh response, or change the question first.
- Use Clear question to empty the box and start over.
How to read the result
Take the answer at face value as a bit of fun. A clear Yes or No is just the random pick landing on one side. A “Maybe” or “Ask again” means the oracle landed on one of its deliberately uncertain phrases — tap again if you want a firmer answer. The most useful thing the oracle does is reveal your own gut feeling: notice whether you are pleased or disappointed by what it says, and let that, not the oracle, guide a real decision.
For decisions that need a fair, transparent random choice, the coin flipper gives you a plain heads-or-tails result, the dice roller handles numbered picks, and the decision wheel lets you spin between your own custom options. For more light fun, the Magic 8 Ball offers the same idea with twenty classic phrases, and This or That keeps the questions coming.
Privacy
The Yes / No Oracle runs completely in your browser. Your question — if you type one — stays in the page and is never uploaded, logged or saved. The answers come from a short list bundled into the tool, and the random choice is made on your own device. There is no account and no tracking. Close the tab and everything is cleared, and because nothing is fetched after load, the oracle keeps working even with no internet connection.
Frequently asked questions
Can the oracle actually predict the future?
Why does it sometimes say 'Maybe' or 'Ask again'?
Do I have to type a question?
Is my question sent anywhere or saved?
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