Vacation indecision
You have the dates booked and no destination. Spin your feasible continent five times, jot the results, and research the two that made you smile, a shortlist in fifteen minutes instead of another week of tabs.
Atlas Mode
Can't pick a destination? Spin the 3D globe, filter by continent and land on your next trip idea with its flag and capital.
Pick a region (or keep the whole world) and spin for your next destination.
"Where should I travel?" is the rare question that gets harder the more options you have. With 197 countries on the table, browsing lists and top-ten articles mostly produces more tabs, not a decision. This page answers differently: an interactive 3D globe sits right in front of you, drag it in any direction, every country drawn in its true place, continents grouped by color, and one press of Spin whirls the planet and lands on a destination, chosen with cryptographically fair randomness. The result arrives with the country's real flag and capital city: a concrete somewhere to react to instead of an infinite everywhere.
The continent chips keep the dream within reach. Scope the spin to Europe for a long-weekend idea, Asia or South America for the big trip, Oceania for the bucket list, or leave it on the whole world and let the planet surprise you. Tap any country by hand, too, when a drag across the globe catches your eye.
Treat the landing as a starting point, not a booking. The page picks the destination; you take it from there, a quick look at flights, the best season to go, visa rules, and budget will tell you within minutes whether this spin is a daydream or your next itinerary. Often your gut answers first: a flicker of excitement (or a quiet "hmm, not there") tells you more about what you want than another hour of list-scrolling. Free, no sign-up, and it spins beautifully on a phone.
You have the dates booked and no destination. Spin your feasible continent five times, jot the results, and research the two that made you smile, a shortlist in fifteen minutes instead of another week of tabs.
Everyone says "someday" about everywhere. Spin the whole world once a month and give the result a fair hearing; it's how places you'd never have googled (a Caucasus republic, a Pacific archipelago) end up on the real list.
When any timezone works, choosing is the hard part. Spin the continent that fits your visa situation and use the landing as this week's research project: cost of living, internet, coworking, community.
Take turns spinning with your partner and rate each landing out of ten. The scores matter less than the conversations, you'll learn fast whether you're beach people, city people, or mountain people.
Scope the chips to your own continent and spin for a short-haul idea. A capital you've never considered is often a cheaper, better weekend than the obvious famous one.
Spin, then everyone gets two minutes to pitch the destination, best case for going, dream itinerary, one hidden gem. Part party game, part accidental trip planning.
Zoom into one country
Next spins
Good answers
Constrain, randomize, then react: pick a continent that fits your time and budget, spin the globe for a fair random destination, and pay attention to your gut when it lands. Excitement means research it; disappointment means you already know where you'd rather go.
Yes. The landing country is drawn with cryptographically fair randomness from whatever scope you set, so all 197 countries (or every country in your chosen continent) have exactly equal odds. No sponsored placements, no hidden weighting.
Yes. Tap a continent chip above the globe (Europe for short-haul ideas, Asia for the big trip, and so on) and the spin only lands within that region. You can also drag the globe and tap any country manually.
No, it only picks the destination. The result gives you the country, flag, and capital as a starting point; flights, stays, seasons, visas, and budget are the research you do next, anywhere you like.
Give it a fair ten minutes: check flight prices from your city, the best months to visit, visa requirements for your passport, and a rough daily budget. If it survives all four, move it to your shortlist; if not, spin again guilt-free.
Completely. There's no sign-up, no download, and no limit on spins, and the 3D globe works with touch on phones and a mouse on desktop, so you can spin from the couch, the office, or the airport.
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