random item generator

Random fruit generator

Your random items appear here.

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Make your own listPick from your own items — prefilled with a few examples to get you started.

Updated July 2026

Press Generate for a random fruit — a mango, a handful of blueberries, a pomegranate. Draw a single fruit or a basket of ten, and turn on Unique so none repeat in a run.

A random fruit turns out to be handy in a lot of small ways. Teachers use one for vocabulary and healthy-eating lessons — name it, describe its colour and taste, or sort it by where it grows. It's a friendly prompt for early readers and language learners, and a fair pick for a classroom game of charades or twenty questions. Cooks and meal-planners let the draw suggest what goes in the smoothie, the fruit salad, or this week's snack, nudging them past the same three fruits they always buy. Artists reach for one as a still-life subject, and anyone running a "guess the fruit" or scavenger game starts with a single roll.

Keep the draw on theme with the type filter. Choose berries for the small, soft ones, citrus for the sharp and zesty, tropical for the sunshine fruits, stone for the ones with a pit, melon for the big juicy summer picks, or orchard for the classic tree fruits like apples and pears. Leave it open when any fruit will do and the surprise is the point.

Every pick is a real, common fruit you can find and eat, so the tool works as much for a shopping nudge or a menu idea as it does for a game. Draw a set with Unique on to plan a rainbow of different fruits for a week of snacks or a class tasting.

Pick the output that suits the moment. A single fruit in list view reads fastest for a flashcard or a warm-up; grid lays a whole basket out for a worksheet or a display; and the wheel spins to one for a reveal a class can watch land. Copy a batch into your notes, or share a link that keeps your type filter and count so a group starts from the same set.

It is free, with no account and no limit on how many you draw. Whether you're planning a lesson, deciding what to snack on, or hunting for a still-life subject, your next fruit is a tap away.

Frequently asked questions

What can I use a random fruit for?

Classroom vocabulary and healthy-eating lessons, charades and guessing games, deciding what to put in a smoothie or fruit salad, and picking a still-life subject to draw.

Can I filter by type of fruit?

Yes. The filter narrows the draw to berries, citrus, tropical, stone, melon, or orchard fruits, so a roll fits a lesson theme or a recipe.

Can I get a list of fruits with no repeats?

Turn on Unique and set the count; the fruits come back with no duplicates — handy for planning a varied week of snacks or a class tasting.

Is it free to use?

Yes. There is no sign-up and no limit on how many fruits you generate.