Forty Gen-1 icons are already on the wheel — spin for a random starter, a Nuzlocke encounter, or your next drawing prompt. Want the deep cuts? Paste the full Pokedex and let all 1025 fight for the slice.
Paste your list below, one item per line
Every great challenge run starts by giving up control, and the wheel is the cleanest way to surrender. The classic opener: put Bulbasaur, Charmander, and Squirtle on a three-slice wheel and let it choose your starter. No favorites, no second-guessing, no restarting because you ‘always pick the fire type’.
From there, the wheel scales with your ambition:
The point isn’t chaos for its own sake — it’s that removing choice makes old games new again.
Here’s the format streamers and friend groups use, start to finish:
If your group also spins for which game to play next, the video game picker handles that layer.
Artists quietly make up a huge share of random Pokemon spins. When you’ve decided to practice but can’t decide on a subject, the decision itself becomes the procrastination — and a wheel with 40 designs on it ends that in three seconds. Spin, draw whatever lands, no negotiating with yourself.
A few prompt formats that keep a sketchbook moving:
For non-Pokemon subjects, the anime character wheel makes a natural companion prompt deck.
The preloaded 40 are Kanto comfort food, but the National Dex now stands at 1025 Pokemon across nine generations, and the wheel will happily take all of them. Grab a plain-text dex list, paste it in one name per line, and save it as ‘Full Dex’ — that preset alone turns the wheel into a genuine random Pokemon generator where a spin might surface something you’ve genuinely never heard of.
Sensible sub-wheels people actually reuse:
However deep you go, the odds never change: one slice, one Pokemon, one fair shot.