There are more chatbots than group chats now. When you can’t decide which AI deserves your question, spin the wheel — twelve models loaded, one gets the prompt, no second-guessing allowed.
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Choosing a chatbot used to be a one-horse race. Now every model has a real specialty, which means ‘which AI should I use?’ is a legitimately hard question — and a perfect one to outsource to a wheel.
Every one of them answers a casual prompt competently. That’s exactly why the choice paralyzes — and why a pointer settles it faster than a comparison chart ever will.
The wheel’s real gift is turning model-picking into a game with formats of its own.
The blind taste test. Spin twice, feed both models the same prompt, strip the names, and judge the answers cold. It’s the fastest cure for brand loyalty — and occasionally the fastest confirmation of it.
The team tiebreaker. Every office now has a standing argument about which assistant to use for the deck, the summary, the regex. Put the contenders on the wheel, spin once, and the decision is made by an authority nobody can accuse of bias: physics, roughly.
AI roulette videos. Content creators run the format on camera — spin, send the day’s challenge to whichever model lands, and react to the output. The site’s built-in spin recorder captures the landing as a clip, which makes the ‘the wheel chose, not me’ framing verifiable.
The daily driver shuffle. One spin each Monday decides your default assistant for the week. By month’s end you have real opinions instead of inherited ones.
The twelve preloaded chatbots are just the demo. Because entries are plain text, the same wheel randomizes any set of tools you’re torn between:
For the yes-or-no half of AI decision-making — ‘should I even automate this?’ — the decision wheel and coin flip are waiting one click away.