Are There More Wheels Or Doors In The World?

The tweet that started it all, “Are There More Wheels Or Doors In The World?”

On March 5, 2022, a man named Ryan Nixon asked the question on Twitter for the first time. It quickly became one of the most amusing debates.

Nixon via his handle @NewYorkNixon had tweeted: “My mates and I are having the STUPIDEST debate… And I am here for it.”

“Do you believe the world has more doors or wheels?” In the Twitter Poll section, he gave two options: Doors or Wheels.

Nixon, a match official, was immediately recognized on the platform following the tweet. He now has 1,246 followers on Twitter.

The Bizarre Twitter & Tiktok Controversy Divides The Internet

The question “Are There More Wheels Or Doors In The World?” has divided Twitter and Tiktok as of now.

A total of 223,347 people responded and voted in the poll. Meanwhile, 3,738 people have quoted the tweet, which has received 4,620 tweets and 16.4 thousand likes.

According to the poll, more than 53.6 percent prefer “Wheels,” while the remaining 46.4 percent prefer “Doors.”

However, the debate is still ongoing because people have created graphs and formulas to prove their answers.

 

A user @lilyffranklin13 has replied: “Who is voting doors??? There are wheels on everything. I have wheels on my garment rack, makeup storage holder, rubbish bin. It’s definitely wheels.”

Similarly, users like @FuriousLives have come up with their own research and answers.

 

 

Another has replied: “Very solidly wheels. All cars have 4 wheels but 2-4 doors. An average home might have 6-10 doors but it also has 3 suitcases with 6-12 wheels. A collection of toy cars might have 400 wheels.”

 

Answer To The Wheels Or Doors Debate

There is no definitive answer to the question, “Are There More Wheels Or Doors In The World?”

With over one billion cars on the road and wheel-operated machinery, Team Wheels believes there must be more wheels than doors.

Team Doors believes that if luggage counts as wheels, then sliding doors, cabinets, and refrigerators should be fair game in this dispute.

As a result, determining who truly won the debate is extremely difficult.