Paste your entrants, hit SPIN on camera, and hand out the prize with receipts — a live wheel draw is the one winner-picking method nobody in the comments can argue with.
Paste your list below, one item per line
The moment you announce a giveaway, you inherit a second job: proving you didn’t rig it. Screenshots of a random-number site convince nobody — a wheel spinning live with every entrant’s name visible convinces everyone, because they can watch their own slice go by.
The on-camera ritual that ends all arguments:
Streamers run this between matches, small shops run it on stories, and Discord servers run it on screen share. The raffle wheel covers ticket-number draws the same way.
Most giveaway drama isn’t about the draw — it’s about sloppy setup. Ten minutes of hygiene before the spin saves a week of comment-section litigation afterwards.
The pre-spin checklist:
Do all five and the only surprise left in your giveaway is the good kind.
One prize is a moment; a prize ladder is a show. The wheel handles tiers with a simple mechanic — spin, delete the winner, spin again — and the order you draw in decides how good the show is.
Build the tension deliberately:
The same delete-as-you-go trick powers office gift exchange draws and party prize wheels — and if your entrants are just names in a hat, the plain name picker does the honors.