Truth or Dare for Adults — Spin Wheel Edition
Truth or dare, with the awkwardness of 'who's choosing the next prompt' replaced by a fair spinning wheel. Drop your own prompts on the wheel — flirty, silly, embarrassing-photo-themed, drinking-game-themed, whatever fits your crowd — and let the wheel pick. Optionally spin a second wheel of player names to pick who answers. All prompts come from you; we don't ship a dare database.
Built for adult party hosts, couples and friend-group game nights, hen and stag parties, housewarmings, and anyone who wants a structured truth-or-dare format without the awkward 'whose turn is it' moment.
Sample entries — Sample prompts
Most embarrassing childhood story Text your boss a compliment right now Do an impression of someone in the room Sing the chorus of your favourite song Show your last camera-roll photo Whisper a secret to the person on your left Tell us a hot take you've never shared Funniest text in your message history
Copy these into the Entries tab on the main wheel.
Why use this wheel
- Bring your own prompts — you control the tone entirely
- Two-wheel pattern: one for players, one for prompts
- AI-generates prompt suggestions (PG / mild / spicy — you pick the tier)
- Save the wheel for next party or for recurring game nights
- Per-slice custom colors to mark 'truth' vs 'dare' slices
- Multiplayer rooms so remote game-night players watch the same spin
- Free, no signup, prompts stay in your browser — never sent to a server
Common uses
- Friend-group game night. Drop the player names on one wheel, your prompts on another. Spin both per round.
- Couples date night. Two-player wheel — alternate truths and dares from a shared wheel. Save for repeat date nights.
- Hen or stag night. Add prompts everyone helped write earlier in the day. Spin between drinks. The wheel removes the 'pressure to come up with something'.
- Housewarming icebreaker. Mild-only prompts to help new acquaintances loosen up. Skip the 'dare' wheel entirely if it's a first-meet crowd.
- Long-distance game night. Open a multiplayer room, share the code, and the whole video call sees the same spin. Sync without screen-share lag.
- Anniversary or relationship-question prompts. Save a wheel of 'how well do you know me' prompts and pull it out a few times a year.
About this wheel
Why a wheel-based truth-or-dare works better than traditional
Traditional truth-or-dare relies on one player asking another for a prompt: 'truth or dare?'. The asker's prompt quality is uneven, the social dynamics get awkward when one player consistently picks brutal dares, and the game has no built-in escalation curve. A wheel solves all three: the prompts are pre-written (during a less-pressured moment), the picks are random (no targeting), and you can structure the wheel to escalate gradually by adding spicier prompts as the night goes on.
The biggest practical benefit is reducing the 'I don't know what to ask' friction. Many groups stall out after 10 minutes because no one wants to invent the next prompt. A pre-loaded wheel keeps the pace.
How to build a good prompt wheel
Start with 15–20 prompts before spinning — too few and you'll repeat too quickly; too many and you'll never hit the same one twice and the wheel won't feel iconic for your group.
Mix tiers: about 60% mild ('what's an embarrassing high-school memory?'), 30% medium ('text your boss something nice right now'), 10% spicy (use your judgement for your crowd). Skip anything that targets specific players — generic prompts work for anyone the wheel picks.
Include some 'no-content' prompts: 'do an impression', 'sing a chorus of your favourite song', 'show your camera roll's most recent photo'. These break up the question-answer rhythm and energise the room.
Save the wheel — your group will develop favourites you'll want to reuse.
Tips for hosting a truth-or-dare night
Establish the 'pass' rule before starting. Standard: each player gets one pass per session, no questions asked. This keeps the game inclusive and prevents anyone from feeling cornered.
If alcohol is involved, set a 'no escalating dares' rule. Wheel-randomness combined with drinks can push the night somewhere no one wanted to go. The pre-written wheel keeps prompts bounded.
For remote game nights, use a multiplayer room (Host room → share code). Everyone sees the same spin in real time, which removes the 'wait, what did it land on?' confusion of screen-share lag.
How to use truth or dare for adults — spin wheel edition
- Write your prompts. Type 15–20 prompts into the Entries panel — one per line. Tip: AI can suggest a mix if you describe the tone.
- Optional: add a player wheel. Click '+' to create a second wheel named 'Players' with everyone's name. Spin it first to pick who's up.
- Set wheel duration. Open Settings → Spin duration. 6–8 seconds builds suspense; 3–4 keeps the pace fast.
- Spin and play. Tap or press Space to spin. Use 'Remove winner' if you want each prompt used once per session.
Frequently asked questions
- Are the prompts provided?
- No — and this is deliberate. We don't ship a prompt database because the right tone varies wildly between crowds. You write the prompts that fit your group. The AI can suggest prompts if you describe the tone you want (mild, flirty, drinking-game), and you can edit before adding to the wheel.
- Is this kid-safe? Can I use it for a teen party?
- It's a generic spin wheel — what shows on it is what you type. If you want a kid-safe version, write kid-safe prompts (or use the 'birthday prize wheel' or 'classroom' versions of the site instead). We don't ship adult content; we provide the tool.
- How do I run the two-wheel format?
- Make a wheel for the player list (click '+' for a new wheel, name it 'Players'), and a second wheel for prompts ('Prompts'). Spin Players first to pick who's up, then Prompts to pick what they do. Use 'Remove winner from wheel' on Players for one-round-per-person fairness.
- Can I tag prompts as 'truth' vs 'dare'?
- Use per-slice colors — color all 'truth' prompts blue and all 'dare' prompts red, for example. Or use two separate wheels: a 'Truth' wheel and a 'Dare' wheel, and spin the Players wheel first to pick a player, who then picks which prompt-wheel to spin.
- Are my prompts private?
- Yes. Prompts and wheels are stored only in your browser's localStorage — never sent to our servers, never seen by us, never indexed anywhere. If you share a wheel via link, the prompts are encoded in the URL; only people you share the URL with can decode them.
- Will my prompts get moderated?
- Static prompts you type yourself aren't moderated. The only moderated path is the AI prompt generator — if you ask it for explicitly inappropriate content, it'll decline. For anything you type yourself, the wheel just shows what you typed.
Free random spinner from SpinOfLuck — no signup, no ads, runs entirely in your browser.