What should I eat tonight?

It's 6:40pm, everyone's hungry, and the conversation is going in circles: “I don't care, you pick.” “I picked last time.” This page ends that. Sixty seconds, real restaurants near you, one decisive answer.

The 60-second answer

  1. Tell us where you are — zip code, city, or one tap for location.
  2. See five real options nearby — well-rated, open now, a mix of cuisines. Not a hypothetical “maybe tacos?” — actual places with photos and hours.
  3. Let something else decide — spin the wheel and accept the verdict. You get directions, the phone number, and delivery links on one card.

Why you can't decide (and why a wheel can)

“What should I eat” is hard precisely because it doesn't matter much — any answer is fine, so your brain refuses to commit to one. Psychologists call it choice overload; households call it the nightly standoff. The fix isn't more browsing, it's fewer options and an outside decider. Five good nearby restaurants and a spinning wheel do both jobs at once. And if the result makes you wince, congratulations — you just discovered a preference you didn't know you had. Spin once more.

Deciding with other people

The wheel's real superpower is that it's neutral. Nobody “won,” nobody has to defend their pick, and the group agreed to the rules before the spin. For groups that want a real say, run a food tournament bracket — 4, 6, or 8 nearby restaurants, head-to-head votes, one earned champion. Whatever mode you use, the result card has a share button: send the verdict to the group chat and close the debate.

When nothing sounds good