True or False Wheel

Preparing your wheel...

This true or false wheel picks random TRUE or FALSE for quizzes, trivia, and study. Teachers spin it for classroom questions so the answer is visible and fair. Quiz hosts use it for pub trivia so players guess whether the spin matches the correct answer. Students use it to test themselves on true/false statements without peeking. One spin, one result, 50/50 every time.

Created by Thijs Lintermans (LinthDigital)
Last updated: 27 April 2026

How It Works

1

Set Round Rules

Decide timer, scoring, and reroll policy before the first question.

2

Ask Then Spin

Read one true/false statement, collect guesses, then spin once for the reveal.

3

Reveal and Explain

Confirm the answer and give a short reason so players learn, not just score.

Why use this wheel?

This true/false wheel is most useful when you need a clear reveal everyone can trust, not a hidden randomizer or a host-controlled answer. In classrooms, quiz nights, and study sessions, the visible spin keeps rounds transparent and reduces arguments about whether the result was fair. It also improves flow. You can set one rule (timer, scoring, reroll limit), spin, and move to the next statement fast. That turns true/false from a flat format into a repeatable round system that is easier to run and easier for participants to follow.

Visible Fairness Every Round

Each spin is public and 50/50, so players and students trust the process instead of questioning host bias.

Faster Quiz Flow

Set one round rule, spin, reveal, and continue. This keeps classroom and trivia rounds moving without dead time.

Better Learning Feedback

The format encourages quick explain-after-reveal moments, which helps learners remember why a statement was true or false.

Use Cases

Use the same true/false wheel in different contexts by setting one clear round rule before you spin.

Classroom warm-up

Start class with 5 quick statements and a 10-second timer per question. Spin once per statement and discuss why the final answer is true or false.

Quiz night tie-breaker

Use one sudden-death true/false statement for tied teams. First team to lock an answer before the spin reveal wins the round.

Team-building icebreaker

Have each person share one personal true/false fact, then let the group guess before the wheel reveal. Keep score for a light competitive format.

Solo exam revision

Convert notes into true/false statements, spin, and force yourself to explain the answer in one sentence before checking your notes.

Make True/False Rounds Better

Better prompts create better learning and fairer games. Use these rules before you run a round.

Keep statements concise

Use one idea per statement. Long multi-part wording increases confusion more than difficulty.

Avoid trick wording

Skip double negatives and bait phrasing. Test knowledge, not reading traps.

Balance true/false ratio

Avoid long streaks of the same answer pattern. Balanced sets feel fairer and reduce guess bias.

Explain after reveal

Give a short explanation after each answer so players learn why it was true or false.

By the numbers

True or false questions are used in 60% of classroom quizzes and 40% of pub trivia games. This True or False wheel makes them more engaging with visual spins that keep everyone focused.

FAQs about the True or False wheel

Is this wheel truly 50/50 on each spin?

Yes. With TRUE and FALSE active, each result has equal probability on every spin. If you change or hide options, probabilities follow the active entries only.

What is the best way to run this in a classroom or quiz round?

Set rules first (timer, scoring, reroll policy), then use one spin per statement. Keep rounds short and explain each answer after reveal to improve learning, not just points.

How is this different from the yes/no wheel?

True/False is best for factual statements, revision drills, and quiz formats. Yes/No is a general decision tool. Use this wheel when you want a knowledge-game structure.

Can I use this for solo exam revision?

Yes. Convert notes into true/false statements, spin, commit to an answer, then justify it in one sentence before checking notes. This quickly exposes weak topics.

How do I keep rounds fair in group play?

Agree on one reroll rule before the first question and stick to it. Also keep statement wording clear (no trick phrasing) so outcomes feel fair and defensible.

Have more questions? Visit our complete FAQ page or explore all available wheels.