If you're looking for a fair way to pick one person from a group, you've likely come across Wheel of Names (wheelofnames.com) and now FluoFish Roulette. Both are popular random selectors, but they create very different experiences.
The short version
- Wheel of Names is a beautiful, customizable spin-the-wheel tool. You enter names (or import a list), spin, and the winner is announced on one screen. It's fast, visual, and great for giveaways, meetings, and classrooms.
- FluoFish Roulette is a phone-synced party game. Everyone joins via QR code, their phones glow during a countdown, and one person is dramatically revealed as "caught" on both their phone and the big screen.
The real question is: Do you want a quick spin on one device, or a memorable, shared moment that involves everyone in the room?
How each one works
Wheel of Names
You go to the site, type or paste names into a list, optionally customize colors and sound. Click spin and a colorful wheel rotates until it lands on one name. The result shows on the screen you're using — usually a laptop or projector. You can save wheels, add weights, or embed them.
FluoFish Roulette
The host opens the game and gets a QR code + short room code. Participants scan with their phones and enter their names. When the round starts, every phone lights up with a shifting rainbow and a visible countdown. At the end, phones shuffle dramatically and one lights up green — the "caught" person — while the host screen shows the winner too.
The outcome happens simultaneously on everyone's personal device.
When Wheel of Names is the better fit
- You need a result in under 10 seconds with almost zero participant setup.
- You're running a giveaway, classroom call, or standup where one screen is enough.
- You want lots of customization (sounds, colors, multiple wheels, history).
- Not everyone in the room has (or wants to use) their phone.
- You need something that works for remote participants or async use.
When FluoFish Roulette is the better fit
- You're hosting a party, game night, team offsite, or event where the selection itself should be fun and social.
- You want everyone physically participating and reacting in real time.
- The suspense and visual drama (glowing phones + shuffle) matter more than pure speed.
- You plan to run multiple rounds quickly — FluoFish supports easy re-rolls and resets without re-entering names.
- You want the reveal to feel like a group experience rather than a lottery draw.
Setup comparison
| Wheel of Names | FluoFish Roulette | |
|---|---|---|
| Who needs a device | Usually just the organizer | Everyone playing (phones) + one big screen for host |
| Joining process | Organizer types names | Everyone scans QR or enters room code |
| Where the result shows | One screen | Every participant's phone + host screen |
| Best group size | Any size | 3–12 people (great energy in small-medium groups) |
| Feel | Fast visual utility | Interactive party game |
| Reusability | Save and share wheel links | Re-roll or reset instantly in the same room |
The bottom line
Wheel of Names is excellent when you need speed and simplicity on a single screen. FluoFish Roulette shines when you want the random selection to feel like an event that everyone remembers and talks about afterward.
They're tools for different contexts. A Monday morning standup probably wants the wheel. A Friday night party or team-building session wants the glowing phones and dramatic reveal.
Want to try the party version? Host a game and get a QR code in seconds — no accounts, no downloads.
Mini FAQ
Q: Is Wheel of Names free?
A: Yes, the core tool is free with optional paid upgrades for advanced features.
Q: Does FluoFish Roulette require everyone to have a smartphone?
A: It works best when most people do, but you can still have fun with a mix (some people can watch on the big screen).
Q: Can I use Wheel of Names for multiple rounds easily?
A: Yes, but you usually need to spin again manually. FluoFish supports quick re-rolls while keeping the same group.
Q: Which one is more engaging for a party?
A: FluoFish Roulette. The synchronized phone glow and personal reveal create way more excitement and photos than a single wheel spin.
Q: Can remote people join FluoFish Roulette?
A: It's designed for in-person groups. Everyone needs to be able to see the host screen and use their phone at the same time.
Q: Does Wheel of Names work on mobile?
A: Yes, the site is mobile-friendly, but the experience is still single-screen.