Rank anything. Drag images or text into S–F tiers (or tap an item, then tap a tier), customize the rows and colors, and download your ranking as a PNG to start the argument.
A tier list is the internet's favorite way to rank things: a stack of lettered rows from S (the untouchable best) down to F (we don't talk about F), with every candidate sorted into exactly one row. It works for anything with more than two contenders — fast-food fries, horror movies, programming languages, family board games, your fantasy league's draft picks. This tool lets you build one in about a minute: load your items, drag them into rows, tweak the labels and colors, and download a clean PNG of the finished ranking to drop into the group chat, Discord server, or subreddit where the debate will rage.
Snacks in the office kitchen · every pizza topping · Halloween candy · sitcoms · gym exercises · programming languages · first-date ideas · airport experiences · holiday songs by December 26th · your own past haircuts (upload the photos — they stay private, remember).
Add your items (images or text chips), drag each into its tier from S down to F, and download the finished image for the group chat to dispute. Rows rename, recolor, and rearrange to fit the format.
Yes: upload images or paste them in, alongside text chips for items that need no picture. Snacks, movies, teams, and colleagues' lunch habits all rank equally well.
Fully: rename S/A/B/C/D/F to anything, change the row colors, and add or remove rows, so 'Elite / Fine / Crimes Against Cuisine' is three edits away.
Download it as an image and post it wherever the argument lives. No watermark, no account link back.
No account, no ads between you and the ranking, and nothing uploaded: the list is built in your browser and leaves only as the image you download.