18+ only. Free social games — for entertainment only. No real money play. Responsible Gaming
18+

Welcome to Arctic Easy Play

This website hosts free social games intended for adults aged 18 and over. No real money is involved. Please confirm your age to continue.

Free profile

Join Arctic Easy Play

Pick a nickname to appear on the leaderboard. It's completely free and stored only on your own device — no email, no password, no payment, ever.

We use a small amount of browser storage to remember your choices. See our Cookie Policy.

Igloo Spin Wheel

One turn, one segment, no fuss Points are fictional and just for fun.

Give the wheel a spin.
0Spins 0Best 0Points
Free play points only — no cash value, nothing to buy.

How to play

  1. Press the button to spin the wheel.
  2. Wait for it to slow down and settle on a segment.
  3. Each segment is worth a different number of points.
  4. Spin again any time — nothing is ever staked.

About this game

Give the wheel a spin and see which point segment it settles on. Igloo Spin Wheel is the sort of game you can play between mugs of cocoa without losing your place.

This is a free social game for entertainment only. No real money is involved, and points cannot be exchanged for anything of value. Intended for players aged 18+.

The story behind Igloo Spin Wheel

The wheel is chance in its most theatrical form — round, bright and impossible to look away from mid-spin. Igloo Spin Wheel recreates the drama at coffee-break scale, where every result costs nothing and means nothing beyond your own running score.

Playing it well

Wheel spins are wonderfully unhurried — the trick is not to click again too fast. Let each result land before chasing the next.

Every segment is equally likely, so the strategy is emotional: pick a lucky segment in your head before each spin and enjoy being right occasionally.

Fair by design

Like every game on Arctic Easy Play, Igloo Spin Wheel runs on plain random logic in your own browser. Nothing is rigged, weighted or remembered between rounds — and since points are fictional, there'd be no reason to anyway.