Game Info
Updated: N/A
Category: Puzzles
Score: 7.1
Brain Color Kids Logical Puzzle

How to Play

Tap on the game screen to play this game Play and have fun in 90 levels

Description

Color Me isn’t your average puzzle game where you just fill in colors for fun. Here, you get a model image at the start of each stage—everything colored just right—and then, well, it’s up to you to make your own blank board look exactly like that example. This means paying close attention to how lines crisscross and sections are divided. I found myself staring at an example longer than expected sometimes, trying to spot one block’s subtle shade difference from its neighbor. The setup is straightforward: grids with winding lines forming blocks, which need filling by picking the right hues in the correct spots. But there’s an underlying catch; it’s rarely as simple as it looks once new colors or more complex arrangements appear. Sometimes I’d rush ahead, thinking I had it figured out—only to realize two areas needed swapping. There’s no timer pressuring you here, so anyone (even kids) can take their time figuring out what goes where. Progress brings more tangled layouts and trickier combinations, making this best suited for players who enjoy patient observation rather than fast reflexes. And, actually, there was a surprising sense of satisfaction after fixing a tough mistake mid-puzzle. For anyone who likes thoughtful trial-and-error or tiny details mattering—that part really matters, really.

Editor's View

At first glance, Color Me seemed almost too simple for my taste—I mean, just copy the picture? But pretty soon into level four or five, my confidence evaporated a bit as extra twists started cropping up. Copying looks easy until you try remembering which section goes with which color when everything blends together visually. That tripped me up more than I thought possible; it’s interesting how quickly you second-guess yourself here. The biggest plus is zero rush—you’re free to experiment without worrying about timers ruining things if you mess up (and I messed up plenty). My only gripe is sometimes I wished for hints when completely stuck; not everyone wants pure trial-and-error every round. Still, the feeling when you finally nail that pattern after struggling? Worth it.