Random Letter Wheel
Alphabet Spinner
Spin the alphabet wheel to choose a random letter from A to Z. Perfect for word games, classroom phonics activities, creative writing prompts, and any time you need a random letter. All 26 letters pre-loaded and ready to spin.
Ways to Use the Letter Wheel
From party games to classroom activities—let the alphabet wheel pick your letter.
Scattergories-Style Games
Spin for a starting letter, then race to name items in specific categories that begin with that letter. The random element keeps every round fresh and challenging for players of all ages.
Phonics Practice for Kids
Teachers and parents can use the letter wheel to make phonics practice playful. Spin a letter, then have students find objects in the classroom, make the letter sound, or practice writing it.
Creative Writing Prompts
Stuck for story ideas? Spin a letter and write a short story where every sentence starts with that letter, or create a character whose name begins with it. Constraints spark creativity.
Name-Place-Animal-Thing Game
The classic paper game gets easier with the alphabet wheel. Spin to pick the starting letter, then fill in categories like Name, Place, Animal, Thing, Food, and Color. No more arguments about which letter to use.
Fun Letter Games to Try
Alphabet Storytelling
Sit in a circle and spin the wheel. Each player must say one sentence that starts with the letter that lands, continuing a collaborative story. It's hilarious, unpredictable, and great for road trips or family game night.
Category Challenge
Spin a letter, choose a category (foods, animals, countries, movies), and set a timer. Players must name as many items in that category starting with the letter as they can in 60 seconds. Competitive and educational.
Speed Writing
Spin the wheel and write a paragraph starting with that letter in exactly two minutes. Challenge yourself to make it coherent, funny, or poetic. A fantastic warm-up exercise for writers and students alike.
Classroom Spelling Practice
Teachers can spin for a letter, then have students write down five words starting with it, practice spelling them aloud, or use them in sentences. It makes vocabulary drills feel less like drills and more like games.