Next-trip roulette
Scope the globe to a continent you can actually reach this year, spin, and spend the evening researching flights and seasons for wherever the pin drops.
Atlas Mode
Spin a 3D globe to a famous world city, it rotates to the exact spot and pins it, with the country's flag. Filter by continent.
Pick a continent and spin — the globe rotates to a famous city and pins it.
The random city generator answers the "where?" question with a spectacle: a 3D globe on the page whirls, slows, and rotates straight to a famous world city, dropping a glowing pin on its exact spot. The card below names the city and its country, complete with the country's flag, so Marrakesh, Kyoto, or Cusco arrives with its place on Earth attached, not just a name on a list.
The deck holds 96 of the world's most-loved cities across every continent. Paris and Rome, Tokyo and Bangkok, Cape Town and Nairobi, Rio and Buenos Aires, Sydney and Auckland. Continent chips above the globe scope the spin: keep the whole world in play, or narrow to Europe for a city-break shortlist, Asia for a backpacking route, or the Americas for a road-trip dream.
It's built for wanderlust and word games alike, travelers picking the next trip to research, teachers running geography quizzes, writers rolling a setting for the next scene. Every spin is cryptographically fair, cities rotate so nothing repeats until the whole deck has come up, and you can drag the globe freely between spins to see where everything sits.
Scope the globe to a continent you can actually reach this year, spin, and spend the evening researching flights and seasons for wherever the pin drops.
Spin the mystery city and quiz the room: which country, which continent, what's it famous for? The pin on the globe settles every argument.
Novelists and game masters spin for a backdrop, a chase through Marrakesh reads very differently from one through Helsinki.
Let the city pick the cuisine and the film: land on Seoul and it's bibimbap night with a Korean thriller.
When the shortlist is deadlocked, give each finalist continent a spin or two and let the globe cast the deciding vote.
One city a day: spin, find it on the globe, read five minutes about it. The pin makes the geography stick.
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Good answers
A curated deck of 96 world-famous cities across all six inhabited continents (from London, Paris, and Rome to Tokyo, Cape Town, Rio de Janeiro, and Sydney) each pinned to its exact spot on the globe.
Yes. Tap a continent chip above the globe and the spin draws only from that region's cities. Istanbul counts under Asia, and Honolulu under Oceania's islands.
Yes, every spin uses your browser's cryptographically secure random generator, and the deck rotates so no city repeats until every city in your scope has come up.
The globe rotates to the city and drops a glowing, labeled pin on its exact location, and the card shows the city's name and country with the country's real flag.
This page runs the curated 96-city deck so every pick has a real pin on the globe. For a fully custom list (hometowns, vacation finalists, anything) use our custom picker wheel instead.
Completely free, no account, nothing to install. The globe is touch-friendly, drag to explore, tap Spin, and it works the same on phones, tablets, and desktops.
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