🪙 Coin Toss & Dice Roll Simulator
Make quick decisions with realistic coin flips and dice rolls! Perfect for games, settling disputes, or adding randomness to any situation.
🪙 Coin Toss
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Click the coin or button to flip! 🪙
Recent Flips
🎲 Dice Roll
Click the dice or button to roll! 🎲
Recent Rolls
📊 Statistics
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Total Flips
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Heads
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Tails
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Total Rolls
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Avg Roll
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Last Result
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🔧 How to Use the Simulator
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Choose Your Tool
Select between the coin toss for binary decisions (heads or tails) or the dice roll for numbered outcomes (1-6). Both tools use advanced randomization for fair results every time.
2
Click to Activate
Click directly on the coin or dice, or use the buttons below them. Watch the realistic 3D animations as your coin flips through the air or your dice tumbles across the surface.
3
View your result instantly after the animation completes. The result is displayed prominently with color-coded styling. Perfect for quick decisions, games, or settling friendly disputes.
Get Instant Results
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Track Your History
Monitor your recent flips and rolls in the history section. View detailed statistics including totals, averages, and patterns. Clear history anytime to start fresh with new sessions.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Are the coin flips and dice rolls truly random?
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Yes! Our simulator uses JavaScript's Math.random() function, which generates cryptographically secure pseudo-random numbers. Each flip and roll is completely independent with equal probability for all outcomes - 50/50 for coins and 16.67% for each dice face.
Can I use this for official games or competitions?
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While our simulator provides fair and unbiased results, we recommend checking the rules of your specific game or competition. Many casual games, classroom activities, and friendly competitions accept digital randomizers, but official tournaments may require physical coins or dice.
Why do I sometimes get streaks of the same result?
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Streaks are completely normal in random sequences! Just like flipping a real coin, you might get several heads or tails in a row. This doesn't mean the system is broken - it's actually proof that the randomization is working correctly. True randomness includes clusters and patterns.
What are some practical uses for this simulator?
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Perfect for making quick decisions (where to eat, who goes first), board games when you've lost pieces, classroom activities, sports coin tosses, settling friendly arguments, probability demonstrations, and any situation requiring fair random selection. Teachers especially love it for interactive lessons!
Does the simulator work offline or save my history?
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The simulator works completely in your browser and doesn't require an internet connection once loaded. However, your history and statistics are stored locally and will reset when you refresh the page or close your browser. This ensures your privacy while providing session-based tracking.
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