Memory-first design
You study a target, then the UI asks you to recall the color without a cheat sheet. That constraint is what separates Toon Tone from passive galleries.
Each run shows you a character target, hides the reference, and asks you to rebuild the color with hue, saturation, and brightness sliders. You play five rounds, earn a transparent per-round score, and see an average that is easy to compare with friends. The sections below explain the loop, the hint trade-off, how wall posts work, and how Tone Legends ranks players.
Overview
The game is not about eye-dropping a pixel. It is about remembering a cartoon palette well enough to reconstruct it under pressure. Short rounds, immediate feedback, and a published average score turn color memory into something you can improve session over session.
You study a target, then the UI asks you to recall the color without a cheat sheet. That constraint is what separates Toon Tone from passive galleries.
Hue, saturation, and brightness map cleanly to how people describe cartoon ink and highlights, which keeps the controls legible on phones and desktops.
Shareable result cards, optional wall posts, and Tone Legends boards give competitive players a reason to chase cleaner averages.
How it works
A full game is always five rounds. Each round follows the same choreography, which keeps scoring fair and makes it simple to explain to new players.
The game highlights a specific part of a cartoon-inspired character. You get a moment to internalize the color before the reference is hidden.
You adjust hue, saturation, and brightness until your selection matches what you remember. The UI shows your working values so you can iterate quickly.
After you lock in a guess, Toon Tone reveals the original color, shows your numeric score for the round, and updates running stats.
Each new round introduces another target. Your final headline number is the average of all five round scores, not a single lucky spike.
When the run ends you can export a share image, copy a link, or post to the community wall with an optional display name.
Weekly content: new characters and targets roll in on a steady cadence so regular players are not memorizing the same frames forever.
Scoring
Transparency matters for competitive color games. Players need to know why a great-looking guess still scores lower than expected, and how hints change the ceiling.
Each individual round is scored from 0.00 to 10.00. The closer your reconstructed color is to the hidden reference, the closer you get to a perfect ten.
If you use a hint on a round, that round loses one full point off the top. Even a nearly perfect reconstruction cannot reach the same ceiling as a no-hint solve.
A complete game adds your five round scores and divides by five. A 9.00 average means you were consistently accurate, not just lucky once in round three.
Leaderboards and bragging rights emphasize the full run so players practice stable technique instead of hunting one flashy guess.
Wall
After your final score, you can tap Post to wall. Your name field is optional, and the message can arrive prefilled so posting stays fast on mobile.
The rotating wall banner blends roughly seventy percent emphasis on recent high-score posts with thirty percent emphasis on the newest submissions from the last few days.
Any posted score of 8.00 or higher qualifies as a high-score post and can display the TOP SCORER label when the banner picks that entry.
Recent posts that are not in the high-score bucket can still appear with a NEW POST label so the feed does not only celebrate veterans.
Tone Legends
Tone Legends is the competitive layer of Toon Tone. It is designed for quick sessions: you can chase a daily top one hundred board or compare lifetime consistency.
Boards typically separate Last 24h momentum from All-Time grinds. Reset timers inside the client explain when the next daily refresh occurs, so you always know whether you are racing the clock or investing in a longer arc.
Devices
Toon Tone is implemented as a responsive web experience. Touch targets on sliders are sized for thumbs, and the share sheet adapts between mobile Web Share API flows and desktop downloads.
Stabilize your phone, use headphones if you are in public, and remember that average scores reward patience more than frantic slider snapping.
Independence
Toon Tone is an independent fan-made color memory game. It is not affiliated with any cartoon studio, network, streaming service, or rights holder. Characters and palettes are original or clearly transformative references meant for practice and fun.
FAQ
Fast answers pulled from the questions players ask before their first five-round run.
Policies
Read the legal pages if you need concrete terms, privacy practices, or eligibility details.
Jump in, warm up your HSB intuition, and see how your average compares on Tone Legends.
Free browser game · Responsive · Independent fan project