Apps Games Articles
Paint by Number: Coloring Game
Better Life - Color and Draw
Rating 4.7star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
star icon star icon star icon star icon
half star icon
4.5

One-line summary Paint by Number: Coloring Game is easy to recommend if you want a low-effort, genuinely relaxing coloring app, but it is less appealing if you dislike repetitive tapping or the usual free-to-play interruptions.

  • Installs

    100M+

  • Developer

    Better Life - Color and Draw

  • Category

    Board

  • Content Rating

    Everyone 10+

  • Latest version

    3.6.1

  • Package

    paint.by.number.pixel.art.coloring.drawing.puzzle

In-depth review
Paint by Number: Coloring Game knows exactly what kind of app it wants to be: a calm, low-pressure way to unwind for a few minutes at a time. After spending time with it as a casual pick-up-and-play app rather than a serious creative tool, that focus comes through clearly. This is not an app for people who want to draw from scratch or build original art. It is a guided coloring experience, and judged on those terms, it is polished, accessible, and surprisingly effective at helping you switch your brain into idle mode. The first thing that stands out is how little effort it takes to get into. You open the app, pick an image, and start tapping numbered sections. That simplicity is the whole product, but it is also the reason the app works. There is no learning curve worth mentioning, no complicated setup, and no sense that you need to commit to a long session. It feels good in the way a tidy casual app should feel good: clear visual targets, fast feedback, and a steady drip of small progress. If you only have five minutes, it works. If you want to stay longer and finish a larger picture, it also works. In practical use, the app’s biggest strength is that it is genuinely relaxing. Many mobile apps call themselves soothing while constantly pushing urgency, timers, or noisy visual clutter. Paint by Number largely avoids that feeling in the core experience. The act of filling in tiny regions one by one creates a satisfying rhythm, and there is a mild puzzle element in spotting harder-to-find cells without the app ever becoming mentally draining. It scratches the same itch as organizing something, completing a checklist, or finishing a jigsaw section. That makes it particularly good for people who want a quiet task while listening to music, a podcast, or just taking a short break. Its second strength is approachability. Because the mechanics are so direct, the app is easy to recommend across age groups and skill levels. You do not need artistic confidence, color theory knowledge, or patience for a drawing interface. If you can tap and zoom, you can use it. That makes it one of those rare mobile games that can be handed to almost anyone without explanation. It also helps that the payoff is immediate: even when you are only a few taps in, the image starts to come together quickly enough to feel rewarding. The third strength is volume and replay value in the broad sense. An app in this category lives or dies on whether it gives you enough to do without feeling stale too quickly, and Paint by Number feels built for repeat visits. The appeal is not that each individual picture is a masterpiece of design, but that the app keeps the experience moving. You can finish one image, start another, and settle into the same comfortable loop with very little friction. For users who like routine relaxation, that consistency matters more than novelty. That said, the app is not flawless, and its weaknesses are the familiar ones for free mobile coloring apps. The biggest drawback is that the experience can become repetitive. The core loop is satisfying, but it is also narrow. After enough sessions, tapping numbered spaces begins to blur together, especially if you are moving through similar kinds of images. This is a feature, not a bug, for some players; repetition is exactly what they want. But if you need variety, strategy, or creativity, the app reaches its ceiling fairly quickly. Another weakness is that the app can test your patience in the way many free apps do. Even when the coloring itself is calm, outside interruptions can break the mood. That matters more here than it would in a louder arcade-style app, because this kind of experience depends on flow. Anything that pulls you out of that relaxed state feels more noticeable. If you are the type of user who is very sensitive to free-to-play friction, this will likely be your main point of hesitation. A third complaint is that some images can shift from relaxing to slightly fiddly. On a phone screen, tiny numbered areas are part of the challenge, but they are not always part of the fun. There were moments where the task felt less like coloring and more like hunting for a stubborn missed patch. Zooming helps, of course, but it also slows the pace. For some people that precision will be satisfying; for others it will feel like busywork dressed as calm entertainment. What impressed me most is that the app generally understands its lane and stays in it. It does not try to pretend it is a professional art platform or an ambitious game. It is comfort software. You open it when you want something low stakes, tactile, and cleanly rewarding. In that role, it performs very well. The high rating and enormous download count make sense once you spend time with it, because this is exactly the sort of app that becomes part of someone’s daily routine: not dramatic, not essential, but dependable. Who is it for? It is for casual players, stress-relief seekers, people who enjoy neat completion loops, and anyone who wants a gentle app they can use in short bursts. It is also a good fit for users who like visual progress without needing any drawing talent. Who is it not for? Anyone looking for real artistic creation, deeper gameplay, or a premium-feeling experience completely free of the usual mobile annoyances may bounce off it. Overall, Paint by Number: Coloring Game delivers on its central promise better than most apps in this space. It is easy to use, consistently calming, and broadly appealing. Just go in knowing that its best qualities—simplicity and repetition—are also the things that will limit it for some players.