Beer Flight
Shape a four-pour beer flight around one useful idea: strength, glassware, food, season, hops, malt, sourness, or the story behind the brewer.
Last updated:
Your roll
- Local Water Profile Course
- Tiny Card Big Pour
- Last Bite Beer Sampler
- Barn Door Saison Set
- Light to Dark Taster Set
- Lunch Break Light Board
- Fresh Cone Taproom Tray
- Spice Rack Four Pour
Previous rolls 0
Another Way Into the Flight
This version treats the Beer Flight as a small piece of menu design. A flight works best when the four glasses do a job together. They might climb an ABV ladder, compare tulip and tumbler glassware, introduce a hop-forward sampler, or turn a local brewery sampler into a story told in sips. The generator gives you a title or compact brief that suggests that job before you choose the exact beers.
Use each result as a working label. For a barbecue pairing flight, test whether smoke, sauce, fat, and bitterness have a place. For a sour and tart course, decide whether the acid refreshes the palate or becomes the main event. For a barrel-aged cellar board, keep the pours small and let the final glass feel deliberate. The strongest brief is not always the flashiest one. It is the one that helps staff explain the board and helps guests remember why the glasses were served together.
After rolling, write down the four beer styles you would pour, one sensory note for each, and one reason the order matters. That simple pass turns a prompt into a flight people can actually drink, discuss, or place inside a scene.
Scribes ask…
Can I really use these beer flight for free?
Yes. Every name rolled with the Beer Flight is free to use in your stories, games, streams or projects — no credit required, though a kind word is always welcome. Just remember the muse is generous, so the occasional name may already belong to someone else; double-check before tattooing it on a logo.
Is there a limit to how many beer flight I can roll?
Roll until your dice catch fire. The codex holds many hundreds of beer flight for this generator alone, and the pool gets shuffled on every visit, so you'll rarely see the same line-up twice.
Does this work without an internet connection?
Once a generator's page has loaded, the names are cached in your browser. You can reroll on a train, in a tent, or deep in a dungeon — no signal required.
Where can I find even more storytelling tools?
Wander over to The Story Shack's Beer Flight for an enriched edition with even more options, illustrations and worldbuilding aids.