How Practice mode helps
Practice mode slows the game down. Instead of chasing a final rank, you focus on one color, one memory moment, and one result. The feedback tells you whether your biggest miss came from hue, saturation, or brightness.
Color memory · HSB sliders · Browser practice
Train your eye by remembering a color, rebuilding it with HSB sliders, and checking which part drifted: hue, saturation, or brightness.
A color memory game gives you a target color, hides it, and asks you to recreate it from memory. It is a simple way to notice how your eye handles color family, intensity, and lightness.
In ToonToneColor, Practice mode uses one color at a time so the task stays clear. The Quick Challenge adds a five-round arcade loop and a shareable rank card.
Practice mode slows the game down. Instead of chasing a final rank, you focus on one color, one memory moment, and one result. The feedback tells you whether your biggest miss came from hue, saturation, or brightness.
Yes. The Practice Trainer and Quick Challenge are free browser games.
You train how well you remember hue, saturation, and brightness after seeing a target color briefly.
No. ToonToneColor is casual practice. It can help you notice color differences, but it is not a professional training or calibration system.
Yes. The game is designed for browser play on phones and desktops, though exact color appearance can vary by screen.
Start with Practice if you want focused training. Start with the Quick Challenge if you want a five-round game and a rank card.