Tap anywhere above and the coin flies — real physics, a cryptographically fair 50 : 50, and a result you can trust. This page is the coin; everything below is only for the moments you'd like to know more.
Tap anywhere to toss. Hold before releasing and you charge the throw: the coin flies higher, spins faster and bounces harder before it tumbles down and lies flat on the ground, pointing a different direction every time — just like a real coin on a real table. On a computer the space bar does the same; on a phone you can even shake the device to flip.
Open the settings and the two faces become whatever your decision needs: classic heads or tails, Yes / No, 1 / 2, or fully custom — Pizza / Sushi, Beach / Mountains, Now / Later. The result screen and statistics follow your labels automatically.
When a single toss feels too thin for the argument, switch on a series. FlickToss tracks each throw with score pips under the coin, keeps the running tally and announces the winner — no mental arithmetic mid-dispute.
Every flip is decided by your browser's cryptographic random generator (crypto.getRandomValues) before the animation even starts; the coin merely performs the verdict. The session statistics in the settings show your heads-to-tails split live — flip enough times and you'll watch it converge on 50 : 50. And roughly once in 6,000 throws, matching real-world physics, the coin lands on its edge.
In the second the coin hangs in the air, you usually discover which side you're rooting for. If the result disappoints you, you already have your answer. The coin doesn't decide for you — it helps you hear what you already know.
Yes. Each result comes from the cryptographic random generator built into your browser — the same class of randomness used for encryption. The animation follows the verdict and can never influence it.
Never. Even after five heads in a row the next flip is exactly 50 : 50 — streaks are a normal feature of true randomness, not a sign of bias.
Yes, roughly once in 6,000 throws — the same odds physicists estimate for a real coin.
Yes. Open the settings, choose Custom, and type anything on the two sides. Yes/No and 1/2 presets are one tap away.
Turn it on in the settings, then just keep flipping. FlickToss shows the score under the coin and announces the winner when one side takes two throws (or three, in best-of-5).
FlickToss is one fast, ad-free toolbox: get a yes or no, roll dice, spin a custom wheel, draw a random number, draw a card. Your setup is saved on your device, and you can install FlickToss on your phone or computer for one-tap access — look for the install prompt after a few uses, or use your browser's "Add to Home Screen".