You've watched these cartoons a hundred times. Now prove you actually remember the colors — not just the characters. No palette. Just memory.
What is the color of
Snow White's Dress bodice from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs?
COLOR DATABASE
You've watched these cartoons a hundred times. Now prove you actually remember the colors — not just the characters. No palette. Just memory.
What is the color of
COLOR DATABASE
Running a free game isn't free
Ads cover the server bill. Numbers refresh once a day.HOW IT WORKS
Most color games show you a target swatch. Toon Tone removes one color from the character image itself — you remember the color, then rebuild it from scratch.
A character you've grown up watching appears with one body part bleached blank. You know the color lives somewhere in your head. The question is whether you can pull it back.
Hue, Saturation, Brightness — the same color model professional designers use. Not RGB math. HSB maps to how your brain actually sees color: "too yellow," "too washed out," "a little darker." Drag until it feels right. The character updates live.
Your guess and the official color appear next to each other — with exact HEX and HSB values for both. Each round scores from 0 to 10. The leaderboard remembers everything.
FAQ
Toon Tone is a free browser game that tests how accurately you remember cartoon character colors. Each round names a specific part of a character — like Mickey's shorts or Goofy's sweater — and asks you to recreate that exact color using hue, saturation, and brightness sliders. No picking from a palette. You rebuild it entirely from memory.
Most color games show you a target swatch and ask you to click the closest match — that's testing perception, not memory. Toon Tone hides the target completely. You have to remember what the color looks like, then reconstruct it from scratch. It's the difference between recognizing a face and drawing it from memory.
Yes. toontone.wiki is the official home for Toon Tone, the cartoon color memory game.
The game currently features a growing mix of Disney, anime, classic cartoon, Pokémon, and animation characters, with five random rounds per play. Each character uses a masked image, so only the target part changes color while the rest of the art stays intact.
HSB stands for Hue, Saturation, and Brightness — a color model built around how humans perceive color, not how screens produce it. Hue sets the color family (red, yellow, blue). Saturation controls how vivid or washed-out it looks. Brightness controls how dark or light it is. Three sliders can reach any color in the visible spectrum, which is why it works better for memory-based guessing than raw RGB values.
Each round scores from 0.00 to 10.00. The score measures the perceptual distance between your color and the true source color, weighted across hue (most important), saturation, and brightness. A perfect match scores 10.00. Using the hint button deducts 1 point from that round. Your final result is the average across all rounds.
Yes. Every character in Toon Tone has a dedicated color profile page with the HEX, HSB, and RGB values for each major part — skin, hair, clothing, and accessories. These pages are free to browse even without playing the game. Visit the Characters section to find any character.
Yes. The game is free to play with no account, no download, and no payment required. The site runs ads to cover hosting costs — you can see a live breakdown of what we earn and spend in the Open Finances page.
Yes. The sliders and layout are designed for touchscreens and work on phones, tablets, and desktops without any download or app installation.
A color guessing game asks you to identify or recreate a color without being shown it directly. Toon Tone uses a memory-based format — the hardest kind — where you recall a cartoon character's color and rebuild it from scratch rather than choosing from options. Learn more about how color guessing games work.
Most color pickers use RGB (Red, Green, Blue) — a format designed for screens, not for human perception. When you try to adjust a teal color using RGB sliders, dragging "more red" gives you muddy gray, not a warmer teal. That's confusing and has nothing to do with how your eye actually sees color. HSB (Hue, Saturation, Brightness) maps directly to how the brain reasons about color: "this feels too washed out" = lower saturation; "this is too dark" = lower brightness; "this is too orange" = shift the hue. Three intuitive dimensions beat six confusing ones. That's why professional designers use HSB, and why Toon Tone does too.
Every character in Toon Tone can have a dedicated color profile page with verified HEX, HSB, and RGB values for each major body part. These pages exist so fan artists, cosplayers, and designers can reference accurate values without guessing. Visit the Characters section to find available profiles.
Color memory is your brain's ability to store and recall a specific tone without seeing it. Research in color psychology shows that human memory tends to shift colors toward "typical" versions — we remember bananas as more yellow than they are, grass as more saturated, skin tones as brighter. Toon Tone exploits exactly this gap. You're confident you remember Bart Simpson's shirt color until you have to reconstruct it with a slider, and suddenly "yellow" splits into a hundred different yellows. Five rounds is enough to reveal your personal color memory patterns.
Yes — the color data on Toon Tone's character pages (HEX, HSB, RGB values) is free to reference for personal fan art, cosplay, design projects, and creative work. The values represent documented observations of colors as they appear in the source material. Each character page links to the specific show or film for full attribution context.