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Color Time - Paint by Number
Nox Future Corp.
Rating 4.6star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
star icon star icon star icon star icon
half star icon
4.5

One-line summary Color Time is one of the most polished and genuinely relaxing paint-by-number apps on Android, but a few ad hiccups and some missing discovery tools keep it from being an easy five-star recommendation.

  • Installs

    10M+

  • Developer

    Nox Future Corp.

  • Category

    Board

  • Content Rating

    Teen

  • Latest version

    2.6.0

  • Package

    com.noxgroup.game.pbn

In-depth review
Color Time - Paint by Number gets the most important thing right almost immediately: it feels good to use. That may sound obvious for a coloring app, but this category is crowded with clunky interfaces, repetitive artwork, and aggressive monetization that breaks the whole point of opening the app in the first place. After spending time with Color Time, what stood out was how often it stayed out of its own way. You open a picture, start tapping through numbered sections, and settle into that familiar low-effort, high-satisfaction rhythm that makes paint-by-number apps such reliable stress relievers. The first strength here is the art selection. Color Time doesn’t just dump a pile of generic line drawings into a grid and call it a day. The app has a noticeably stronger visual identity than many rivals, with a heavy emphasis on anime-inspired illustrations, stylish character art, decorative wallpapers, and attractive themed collections. If your ideal coloring app includes a lot of polished digital art rather than only simple flowers, mandalas, and animals, this one has a clear advantage. Even outside the anime material, the image library feels curated rather than random, and that helps the app feel more premium than its free price tag suggests. The second big win is how smooth the actual coloring process is. Tapping numbered areas is responsive, and the app does a good job of keeping the flow moving. The hit areas feel forgiving enough that you’re not constantly zooming in and poking at microscopic fragments just to finish a section. That matters more than it sounds. A paint-by-number app lives or dies by friction, and Color Time generally avoids the little annoyances that make longer coloring sessions feel like work. It’s easy to lose track of time here, which is exactly what many people want from this kind of app. A third thing Color Time does especially well is presentation around finished art. Many of the images are clearly designed with wallpaper use in mind, and that gives the app a practical payoff beyond the coloring itself. Finishing a picture feels a bit more rewarding when it looks like something you might actually save, share, or set as a background. The app leans into that aesthetic appeal, and it works. There’s a stronger sense of “I made something nice” than in a lot of more disposable color-by-number apps. That said, Color Time is not flawless, and the biggest weakness is inconsistency around ads and ad-based rewards. In ordinary use, the app can feel surprisingly light on interruptions, which is excellent. But when you interact with optional rewards like hints or special tools, the experience can become less reliable. There are moments when the ad flow feels awkward, or the reward doesn’t seem to register correctly, and that undercuts the otherwise calm tone of the app. In a genre built around relaxation, even a minor ad glitch feels bigger than it would in a faster-paced game. The second weakness is discoverability. Color Time has a lot of content, but finding exactly the kind of image you want can still feel more manual than it should. If you’re in the mood for a specific theme, visual style, or character type, browsing can become a little too dependent on scrolling through categories and featured sets. A stronger search and filtering system would make the app much easier to live in over the long term, especially for people who know what they like and want to jump straight to it. The third drawback is that the app’s artistic identity, while strong, is also somewhat selective. The anime and stylized illustration emphasis is a major plus for the right audience, but it also means Color Time won’t be the universal recommendation that some broader coloring apps are. If you prefer very traditional adult coloring-book material, extremely simple children’s images, or the ability to import and color your own photos, this app may feel narrower than you want. It has variety, but it still has a distinct taste. In day-to-day use, though, Color Time remains easy to like. The interface is attractive, the artwork often looks legitimately good, and the act of coloring is relaxing in the way this category promises but doesn’t always deliver. It also helps that the app doesn’t constantly scream at you to spend money or upgrade every few taps. Even when optional monetization is present, the overall tone is less pushy than many free mobile apps. That makes a huge difference in whether you want to come back tomorrow. Who is this for? It’s a strong fit for anyone who uses coloring apps to unwind, especially players who enjoy anime art, wallpaper-friendly images, and a large rotating catalog of stylish illustrations. It also works well for users who want a low-pressure creative routine without needing actual drawing skills. Who is it not for? If you hate any dependency on ads, want advanced search tools, or prefer a more classic coloring-book experience over trendy digital art, you may find the app a little less perfect than its best moments suggest. Overall, Color Time - Paint by Number is one of the better free coloring apps available on Android. It feels polished where it matters most: the art is appealing, the coloring flow is smooth, and the whole experience is built around quick relaxation. It loses a bit of ground because of occasional ad-related friction and because content discovery could be smarter, but neither issue is enough to overshadow what it does well. If you want a paint-by-number app that feels modern, visually attractive, and easy to stick with, Color Time is a very safe recommendation.