Paste a list of names, choose how many teams you want (or how big each team should be), pick how to handle leftover players, and generate fair, randomized teams in a click.
Splitting a group into teams should take seconds, not a spreadsheet. Paste your roster — students, players, coworkers, party guests — choose how you want them divided, and this tool deals everyone into fair, random teams instantly. It's perfect for gym class and group projects, pickup games and tournaments, icebreakers, secret-partner draws, standup rotations, and anywhere you need an impartial split.
Everything happens in your browser. The names you paste are never sent anywhere, so it's just as comfortable for a work roster or a guest list as it is for a classroom.
spread the extras so team sizes differ by at most one, keep full teams with a smaller last team, or set the leftovers aside in their own group.No sign-up, no ads, no upload — paste, split, and get on with the game.
Paste the names, choose how many teams (or how big each should be), and the generator deals everyone out randomly. Copy the result to the board or chat, and reshuffle in one click if the first draw needs it.
You choose: spread the extras across teams or collect them into a smaller final team. The option is explicit so nobody's placement looks like favoritism.
Yes, drawn from your browser's cryptographically secure randomness, so every arrangement is equally likely and nobody can claim the fix was in.
Because captains picking is a social minefield and slow besides. A random draw is instant, fair by construction, and immune to relitigating.
No. The list is processed in your browser, which matters when it is a class roster.