Click the spinning wheel in the center of the page
Watch the globe wheel spin through 16 world capitals
The wheel slows and lands on a random capital city
A travel card reveals the country, region, and an amazing fact
Click 'Around the World!' to dismiss and spin again
16 iconic world capitals spanning all 6 inhabited continents
Color-coded by region: Asia, Europe, Africa, North America, South America, and Oceania
Country of each capital revealed on every spin
Surprising historical, geographical, or architectural fact for every capital
Deep oceanic globe-themed design with flag emojis
The World Capitals Spinner Wheel is an interactive geography tool that randomly selects one of 16 famous capital cities from around the globe. Each spin reveals the capital's country, its continental region color-coded for easy identification, and a fascinating fact you may never have known. Whether you're studying for a geography quiz, picking a travel destination, assigning cities to game characters, or simply satisfying your curiosity about the world, this wheel makes every spin an adventure.
The wheel features Tokyo, Paris, Cairo, Washington DC, Brasília, Canberra, Moscow, Beijing, New Delhi, Nairobi, Buenos Aires, Ottawa, Reykjavik, Jakarta, Mexico City, and Pretoria — 16 capitals across 6 continents.
Yes! Each click generates a random initial spin velocity so every capital has an equal chance of being selected. The wheel decelerates naturally, making each result feel like a real wheel of fortune.
South Africa's three capitals (Pretoria, Cape Town, and Bloemfontein) are a legacy of the post-war settlement between British and Boer colonies, distributing government functions across different cities to balance political power.
Absolutely! The spinner is a great way to make geography engaging. Spin it and ask students to name the country, continent, or share a fact about whichever city it lands on.
Jakarta is included as one of the most historically significant and populous capitals in the world. Its ongoing story — the city is sinking while Indonesia builds a new capital called Nusantara — is itself one of the most fascinating facts in modern urban geography.