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Satisfying Coloring
Rating 4.5star icon
  • 10M+

    Installs

  • Mad1 Games

    Developer

  • Casual

    Category

  • Teen

    Content Rating

  • info@mad1games.com

    Developer Email

  • https://www.mad1games.com/privacy-policy/

    Privacy Policy

Screenshots
editor reviews

So, I've been messing around with Satisfying Coloring on my Android for a few weeks now, and I gotta say, it's a chill little diversion. It's basically a digital coloring book, which falls under the casual and puzzle genre. You can download it straight from Google Play, and it's also on the App Store for iOS users. It's a pure mobile game, so no PC version on Steam or anything for Xbox or Switch—it's strictly a phone app experience. The game first launched in 2022, and it's been quietly building a following; it's got over 10 million installs on Google Play alone, which is solid for a niche relaxation game. The best part? It's completely free to download and play, though there are in-app purchases. You can buy ad removal packs for around $3-5, or special color palettes for about $1-2 each. There's also the occasional rewarded ad to unlock extra tools, which is pretty standard for these free mobile games and not too intrusive.

Playing Satisfying Coloring is as straightforward as it gets. You pick from hundreds of images—animals, mandalas, patterns, landscapes—and just start tapping to fill in sections based on numbers or just freehand. The best part is the feedback; each tap makes a soft tap sound and the color smoothly fills the area with a satisfying ripple effect. It's incredibly meditative. Honestly, my favorite part is the "magic" brush mode, where it auto-fills large areas without me having to tap a million times. It keeps the experience flowing, so I never get bored or frustrated with small details. The app runs smoothly on my Android, no crashes, and the interface is clean and beginner-friendly. It's perfect for winding down after a long day or just killing time on a commute.

Compared to other coloring apps like Happy Color or Color by Number, Satisfying Coloring feels more polished for what it aims to do. Happy Color is great but has a lot of ads and pushes its subscription hard, while Color by Number has a less smooth touch response. Satisfying Coloring stands out because it actually feels satisfying, just like the name says. The sound effects and visual feedback are tuned to be relaxing, not jarring. Other games might have better image variety, but this one nails the core feel. I'd recommend this app to anyone who enjoyed casual puzzle games like I Love Hue or even more complex ones like Zen Koi. It's not trying to be anything groundbreaking—it just wants to help you chill, and it does that better than most free apps in the Google Play store. The lack of a forced internet connection is also a huge plus for playing offline.

features

  • Relaxing Audio-Visual Feedback 🎵: Each tap produces a soft, satisfying pop sound paired with a smooth liquid-like color fill animation. It's way more polished than the clunky transitions in Color by Number, making every stroke feel rewarding and calming.
  • Freeform Mode Without Numbers 🖌️: Unlike typical color-by-number apps like Happy Color, this game offers a free painting mode where you just pick a color and draw. This gives you total creative freedom to experiment with shading and patterns, which is a rare treat in this genre.
  • Offline Play Capability 📴: You can play the entire game without an internet connection on Android, which is a huge advantage. Many similar apps like Paint by Number require constant data to load images or serve ads, but this one lets you zone out anywhere.
  • Regularly Updated Image Library 🖼️: The developers add new images every month, focusing on trending themes like animals and mandalas. It keeps the app fresh, unlike some older games on Google Play that feel abandoned after a few updates.

pros

  • Stress Relief with a Purpose 🌿: The systematic tap-and-fill gameplay is incredibly therapeutic. It's more engaging than just staring at screensavers or playing repetitive puzzle games like Two Dots. It gives your hands something mindless to do while your brain unwinds, like a digital fidget spinner.
  • Excellent Touch Responsiveness 👆: The tapping feels instant and accurate, even on lower-end Android devices. I've tried similar apps like Zen Color, which have noticeable input lag, but here there's zero frustration when filling small, intricate sections. The hit detection is top-notch.
  • No Aggressive Monetization 💰: This is a huge strength. Other free games like Color by Number on Google Play constantly push unskippable 30-second ads or demand $10 monthly subscriptions. Here, you just get a short, skippable ad every few images, and the option to buy an ad-removal pack for a couple of bucks is fair.

cons

  • Limited Image Resolution 🖼️: For a game focused on being satisfying, the artwork feels slightly low-resolution when zoomed in, with slight pixelation on curves. Games like Happy Color offer higher-res illustrations from professional artists, which look noticeably sharper on modern phones.
  • Repetitive Soundtrack 🎵: There's only one looping background music track, and it gets old fast. Unlike the soothing ambient soundscapes found in similar apps like I Love Hue, you'll probably want to mute the music and play your own playlists in the background after the first hour.
  • Small Initial Palette 🎨: New players only start with about 15 basic colors. To unlock unique shades or metallic looks, you have to wait for daily rewards or make in-app purchases for $1-2. Other free apps on Google Play like Coloring Book for Me give you a much wider selection of free colors right from the start.

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