Use case
Random pair generator
Create quick pairs for partner discussions, peer review, classroom practice, and workshop breakouts.
Use case
Random pair generator
Reuse Name Picker for two-at-a-time draws
Status
03
Ready to start
3-step flow
Use caseSeeded
Result links
Open the exact same draw again from a shared URL.
Mobile
One-thumb flow
Use the bottom bar for re-roll, reuse, and share.
Instant
No install
Open the page and start without setup overhead.
Scene template packs
Pairing workflow
Recommended tool: Name Picker with no repeats
The repo does not yet have a dedicated pair-builder UI, but the current engines are enough for a strong P0 wrapper. Draw two names at a time with no repeats, or switch to Random Team when you need larger groups.
Recommended starting point
Start pair draws in Name Picker
Set draw count to 2 and keep no-repeat on.
Use-case CTA experiment
Frame pairing as a teacher-first classroom action
Compare whether pairing visitors click more when we frame the page around classrooms, workshops, or progression into larger groups.
Useful when traffic is primarily coming from class activities and student participation scenarios.
Use Random Team for trios or larger groups
Better for workshop breakouts or table groups.
Trust layer
Fair pairing checklist
Use this when you need to explain how the result was produced and what people can verify afterward.
- 1Show the full participant list before pairing begins.
- 2Explain in advance how the final odd participant will be handled.
- 3Run the pairing once and display the result immediately.
- 4If you regroup later, treat it as a new round instead of editing the old output.
For classrooms and workshops, most fairness disputes come from hidden regrouping rules, not from the randomizer itself.
What this page helps you do
- ✓Use no repeats so each participant appears once before anyone is redrawn
- ✓Share the draw link when participants ask how pairs were formed
- ✓For odd totals, redraw once to create one group of three
- ✓A future P1 enhancement could auto-batch the list into fixed-size pairs
Why this route is different from generic grouping
Optimized for pair-specific jobs
Pairing has a different mental model than team generation. This page keeps the recommendation narrow so teachers and facilitators do not have to reinterpret a larger-group tool first.
Works for both classroom and workshop energy
The current wording supports partner drills, peer review, and short discussion rounds, which makes the page useful across both school and adult facilitation contexts.
Sets up a future dedicated pair builder
By separating pair intent now, later product work can add auto-pair batching without undoing the SEO or user path established here.
Quick FAQ
Is this already a dedicated pairing product?
Not yet. It is a task-specific landing page that gets people into the fastest current pairing workflow without making them decode the full tool catalog first.
When should I switch to Random Team?
Switch when you need trios, table groups, or larger breakout groups instead of strict pairs.
Keep exploring
Mobile: use the bottom bar for re-roll / reuse / share.