MyWheelName.com
Prime Video Fantasy Movie Picker
Prime Video's catalogue is huge but disorganised. Half the homepage is store-rentals dressed up as included-with-Prime content, and the search experience famously hides good films behind weird carousels. The Prime Video Movie Picker spins through titles included on the service and hands you one, no homepage scrolling required. Group nights with D&D players. Solo evenings when you want to disappear into another world. Marathons during cold weekends. Family viewings where the kids are old enough for some peril. The wheel handles both the grown-up and family ends without favouritism unless you trim it yourself. On Prime Video specifically, that means leaning on whatever fantasy titles the service currently has licensed — and that catalogue rotates more than the service homepage admits, so the wheel reflects what's actually available rather than what was promoted last quarter. Prime sometimes shuffles titles between included and rental tiers, so check that what the wheel landed on is still free before committing. If you spot rentals slipping in, remove them from the wheel and the picker remembers the trim. Fantasy films are often long. Check runtime before committing on a school night. If the wheel keeps surfacing the obvious LotR/Hobbit/Narnia titles you've already seen, edit them out and the picker will lean toward less-mainstream fantasy — that's where the genre's most interesting work lives.
What does the Prime Video Fantasy Movie Picker actually pick from?
A live catalogue pulled from TMDb (the open movie database). The wheel reflects what's currently available, filtered by service and genre where applicable, so the result is something you can actually click play on.
Can I filter by service or genre?
Yes. Movie picker pages cover all services, a single streaming service, a single genre, or a service-and-genre combo. Each combination has its own URL, so you can bookmark, for example, just the Netflix horror picker.
Does the wheel work on phones?
Yes. The wheel is fully responsive, so spinning on a phone or tablet works the same as desktop. Touch controls feel natural and the wheel scales to whatever screen you've got.
Why use the Prime Video Fantasy Movie Picker instead of just browsing?
Because algorithms put you in a rut. The wheel doesn't know what you watched last week, so it surfaces titles you'd skip past in a row of recommendations. It also forces the decision, which is half the battle of streaming night.