AI Decision Maker: Weigh Your Options Clearly
Write your two (or more) options and what matters to you; Ryna AI shows the most sensible next step with pros-cons and a weighted comparison.
When a decision blocks you, the problem is usually not missing information but mental clutter. Ryna AI's decision maker takes your options and the criteria that matter to you, lays out each option's pros and cons, weights a comparison by your criteria, and suggests a sensible next step with its risks.
The goal isn't to decide for you but to clarify the decision. Ryna offers a neutral framework so you make a conscious, not emotional, choice. Weight the comparison to your values with 'I care more about salary' or 'I'm risk-averse'.
How it works
- 1
Write your options
Write two or more options: 'job offer A vs B', 'this city or that'.
- 2
State your criteria
Say what matters and its weight: salary, location, growth, risk, happiness…
- 3
Get the comparison
A clear table with pros-cons, weighted scores by criteria, and risks.
- 4
Read and decide
Ryna suggests a sensible direction; re-weigh with 'I care more about this'.
Why Ryna AI
- Pros-cons list: it clearly separates each option's strengths and weaknesses.
- Weighted comparison: it scores by the criteria that matter to you — measures, not moods.
- Risk view: it notes each option's likely risks and worst case.
- Neutral framework: a structured view instead of an emotional one.
- Personal values: adjust the weights with 'I care more about this'.
- Clear next step: it doesn't stall the decision; it suggests a sensible direction (still yours).
Example result
Frequently asked questions
Is the decision maker free?
Yes. On the free plan you can list options and get a comparison, with near-unlimited daily use.
Does it decide for me?
No. It offers a neutral framework and a sensible direction; the final decision is always yours.
Can I compare more than two options?
Yes, it can compare multiple options against your criteria at once.
Can I give my own priorities?
Yes. Tell it which criteria matter more and it weights the comparison accordingly.
Is it useful for emotional decisions?
It helps structure cluttered thinking; but for major life decisions we also suggest consulting people you trust.