Editorial Policy
How RandThings Content Is Written
Last updated: April 20, 2026
Purpose
RandThings publishes practical tools and short guides that help visitors make random selections, organize lists, create prompts, and understand how each tool should be used. The goal is to make pages useful before they are monetized.
Content standards
Tool pages should explain what the tool does, when it is useful, how to get better results, what the limitations are, and whether user input stays in the browser. Guides should give practical examples rather than repeating generic definitions.
Review process
Pages are reviewed for clarity, accuracy, broken links, misleading claims, and usefulness. Content should avoid exaggerated promises and should not present casual random tools as certified systems for gambling, legal draws, security audits, medical advice, or financial decisions.
Advertising separation
Advertising should never be disguised as navigation, tool controls, download buttons, or generated results. Ads should be labeled and visually separated from the main tool experience when ad units are active.
Corrections
If you find unclear, outdated, or incorrect content, please contact RandThings through the contact page. Useful corrections are reviewed and applied when they improve the page for visitors.
What we avoid
RandThings should not publish pages that exist only to target a keyword, repeat the same explanation with minor wording changes, or suggest that casual random tools are suitable for regulated decisions. Thin pages are improved, merged, or removed when they do not help visitors.
Review priorities
Priority is given to pages that visitors are most likely to use directly: tool pages, guides, policy pages, and category pages. These pages should clearly answer what the tool does, who it helps, what data is needed, what the limits are, and what related page may be useful next.