Rigged Spinning Wheel for Pranks, Demos, and Testing
A rigged spinning wheel, rigged wheel, or controlled random picker is useful when you need a planned reveal, a rehearsal, a harmless party prank, or a test case for a tool demo. Spinly keeps the main wheel simple, with organiser modes that can make outcomes more controlled when that is the point of the activity.
How to use Spinly responsibly
Use Equal mode whenever the result needs to be fair. Use Sequence mode when the next result should follow a planned list. Use Weighted mode when options should have different chances. If people are relying on the result, say which mode you are using.
Controlled outcomes should be treated as entertainment, testing, or organiser-led facilitation. They should not be presented as fair random draws for serious competitions.
Which mode fits the job?
Sequence mode is best when you already know the order of results and want a wheel-style reveal. Weighted mode is better when every option can still win, but some should be more likely than others. Equal mode is the correct choice for ordinary random picking.
If you are running a giveaway, prize draw, hiring decision, admission decision, gambling game, or paid public competition, use fair transparent rules instead.
Controlled, preset, and rigged-style modes are designed for entertainment, testing, demos, and harmless private use. Do not use them for paid draws, public competitions, prize-money giveaways, regulated promotions, or situations where people expect a fair random result.
Related pages
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FAQ
Quick answers before you use the tool.
Can Spinly make a controlled wheel result?
Spinly has organiser modes such as Sequence and Weighted that can control or influence outcomes for demos, testing, and entertainment.
Is a rigged wheel fair?
No. If the result is controlled or weighted, it should not be presented as a normal fair random draw.
Can I use this for a giveaway?
Use Equal mode for giveaways and be clear about the rules. Do not use hidden controls for real prize draws or public competitions.
What is the safest wording to use?
Call it a demo, prank, rehearsal, reveal, or organiser-controlled activity when outcomes are planned.