Coloring For Accuracy
In Coloring For Accuracy, a finished picture always appears first, and then the game asks to recreate it color for color. Instead of free painting, every level works like a visual copy test. One drawing acts as the sample, and the other stays blank, waiting for careful coloring. Early rounds use very simple shapes, but later levels switch to detailed animals that punish even tiny color mistakes with fewer points.
How to play?
Watch the preview image closely before doing anything. The original painting shows which colors go in which zones and how much space each color covers. Once it disappears, pick a shade from the color palette and tap or click the matching region of the blank figure. The coloring game checks two things at once: the selected color and how much of the shape receives that color.
Fill each figure in Coloring For Accuracy until the proportions look as close as possible to the reference. If a segment in the model picture uses only a thin stripe of a color, avoid covering a huge area with it in the copy. The more precisely the filled area matches, the higher the accuracy score at the end of the round. Players can treat early geometric puzzles as warm-ups and then move to animal drawings that pack in more small parts and separate color zones. A calm pace usually works better than rushing through the palette. Run through the levels, compare results after each check, and slowly push the score higher with cleaner, more exact coloring choices. Load it up, test that color eye, and see how far your accuracy streak can go in this coloring game.
About this game:
- Players have rated this game 3.88 out of 5, based on 110 votes.
- Released in September 2023.
- Ready to play on Web Browser (PC).
- Age rating: 6+
- Powered by HTML5 (Unity WebGL) — jump right in and start playing in your browser, no downloads needed.
Game features:
- The game always shows a complete reference image before letting players color the blank version.
- Scoring depends on both color correctness and how closely the filled areas match the original proportions.
- Later stages replace basic shapes with animal drawings that include many small, separate color regions.
Tips & Tricks:
- Pause for a moment and mentally divide the sample picture into large and small color blocks before coloring.
- Color the biggest zones first, then adjust small areas to fine-tune your overall proportions.
- If a color appears only in tiny spots, save it for last so you do not overfill with it.
- Use early levels to practice quick color matching so you can focus more on proportions on harder animal stages.
























