The argument-ender for two-person households.

Couple Dice is a tiny browser tool with one job: take the decision off the two of you and hand it to chance. You write six things — six chores you need to split, or six things you both wish you'd do this week — and a six-sided die settles the rest. Three chores each. Six wishes placed into the week. No one had to insist, no one had to give in.

It's built for the kind of friction that only shows up between people who actually live together: the dishes-vs-laundry standoff, the "I don't know, what do you want to do?" loop, the slow drift where one person ends up carrying more than the other. Couple Dice doesn't fix the relationship — it just removes the bargaining from the small stuff.

Eight moments Couple Dice was built for.

Sunday-night dread

The chore list looms but neither of you wants to start the negotiation. Roll instead.

After a hard week

You're both tired. The thought of planning anything feels heavier than the planning itself.

"I don't mind, you pick"

The loop has happened three times this week. You both clearly do mind. The dice can't be polite.

When one of you is travelling

You'll be apart for a week. Pre-plan a wish-per-day so the distance has shape.

Just moved in together

You haven't built the chore rhythm yet. Use the dice as scaffolding while you figure out who actually cares about what.

Same fight, third time

You keep arguing about who does the bins. Let randomness break the loop for one week.

A boring stretch

Nothing's wrong; nothing's exciting. Six small wishes, placed across six time slots, is enough.

A birthday week

Write six small treats you'd give each other. Let the dice decide which day each one lands on.

Three steps. About two minutes.

01

Pick a mode

Chores splits six tasks 3-and-3 between two players. Wishlist places six shared ideas across six time slots in the week — from Tonight to Sunday Reset. Tonight's Plan picks one idea for the evening. Bedroom Dice (18+) rolls three twelve-sided dice for adult couples.

02

Write your six

Type them in. Anything goes — "take the bins out," "watch the sunset," "send each other a song." The examples in the placeholder are just for inspiration.

03

Roll, settle, save

Tap the dice for each round. Each number lands once — no duplicates. When all six are placed, save the result as an image to share or print.

Don't love a roll?

Every result card has a "↻ Roll again" option. Use it once or twice if the dice landed somewhere genuinely impractical — but try to take the third one. The whole point is to let chance break the tie.

A coin flip ends the meeting.

Research on couple conflict from the Gottman Institute suggests that 69% of long-term partner disagreements are perpetual — they recur because they're rooted in differences that won't resolve. Most household-chore arguments fall in that bucket. They're not about the dishes; they're about fairness, attention, and the slow accounting of who's doing more.

Couple Dice doesn't try to resolve the underlying dynamic. It just removes the bargaining ritual from the small weekly version of it. When the dice decides, neither of you "lost." Neither of you had to insist. The result is binding only for that week — you can roll fresh next Sunday.

For Wishlist mode, the same logic helps with planning paralysis. Two people who can't decide between "stay in" and "go out" can both write three things they'd be happy doing, then let the week sort itself. The friction was never about the list — it was about being the one to make the call.

Pairs well with

If chore fairness is a recurring theme, try our writing prompt: Why 69% of couples' fights never go away — and what to do anyway.

Before you roll.

Is Couple Dice really free?

Yes. Completely free, in-browser, no account, no download. All four modes — Chores, Wishlist, Tonight's Plan, and Bedroom Dice (18+) — are available without any paid tier.

What's the difference between Chores and Wishlist mode?

Chores splits six household tasks fairly between two players — three each — using random dice rolls. Wishlist places six things you both want to do across six time slots in the week (Tonight, Tomorrow, Midweek, Friday Vibe, Saturday, Sunday Reset).

How do Tonight's Plan and Bedroom Dice work?

Tonight's Plan is a quick picker: each partner types up to 3 ideas (e.g. "order takeout," "walk to the park"), and one dice roll picks one idea for the evening. Bedroom Dice (18+) rolls three twelve-sided dice — Action × Where × How long — and assembles a sentence like "Alex kisses Sam's neck for 15 seconds." It sits behind a session-only 18+ consent gate, and includes a "Pass" button for any roll that doesn't fit.

Can the dice land on the same number twice?

In Chores and Wishlist, no — each session draws six unique numbers from 1–6 so every entry gets exactly one round. Bedroom Dice uses three independent twelve-sided dice that can repeat any combination. Tonight's Plan picks one idea per roll. You can also reroll any result if it genuinely doesn't work.

What if we roll something that doesn't fit the time slot?

In Chores and Wishlist, use the reroll option once or twice if a slot result is genuinely impractical (e.g. "watch the sunset" landing on Tuesday morning) — but try to honor the third roll, since letting chance break stalemates is the whole point. In Bedroom Dice, tap "Pass" if any roll feels off — the dice immediately re-rolls without taking your turn.

Can we save the result?

Yes — Chores and Wishlist produce a save card you can download as a PNG. Share it in your group chat, AirDrop it to your partner's phone, or print it on the fridge. The card includes the week date so you can look back. (Tonight's Plan and Bedroom Dice are designed to be in-the-moment and don't generate a save card.)

Is anything stored on your servers?

Nothing. Your items, names, and results live entirely in your browser session. Close the tab and it's gone. Refresh the page within the same session and your progress persists — but it never leaves your device.

What if we both want different chores?

That's the most common case. The dice doesn't care which one of you would have volunteered for the laundry — it just splits the six tasks 3-and-3. The fairness is in the structure, not the preferences.

Can three or more people play?

Not in this version. Couple Dice is built around two-person households. We may add party modes in a future version — let us know via contact@unravelcouplegames.com.

Stop bargaining. Start rolling.

Two minutes. Six things. One fair result your week can run on.