Use these palettes as practice targets, not official brand color claims.
Toon Tone color palettes are built for a memory game: each card points to one playable target shade, one named character part, and one HSB answer you can compare after a round.
Palette reference
Browse the Toon Tone character palette references by target part, HEX color, HSB value, source prompt, and difficulty before practicing the shade.
Toon Tone color palettes are built for a memory game: each card points to one playable target shade, one named character part, and one HSB answer you can compare after a round.
Each card shows the main target shade plus supporting page colors. Open the linked prompt when you want to test the color from memory instead of just reading the value.
Palette #1
Palette #2
Palette #3
Palette #4
Palette #5
Palette #6
Palette #7
Palette #8
Palette #9
Palette #10
Palette #11
Palette #12
Palette #13
Palette #14
Palette #15
Palette #16
Palette #17
Palette #18
Palette #19
Palette #20
Palette #21
Palette #22
Palette #23
Palette #24
Palette #25
Palette #26
Palette #27
Palette #28
Palette #29
Palette #30
Palette #31
Palette #32
Palette #33
Palette #34
Palette #35
Palette #36
The first swatch and HEX value are the scored Toon Tone target, so use that color as the memory anchor.
Hue picks the color family, saturation controls intensity, and brightness explains many close-looking misses.
Reading values helps calibration, but the game works best when you commit a guess before seeing the answer.
No. They are Toon Tone practice references for playable prompts, not official studio, brand, or licensing color specifications.
HEX is useful as a compact reference, while HSB is easier for actual guessing because it separates hue, saturation, and brightness.
Pick a palette, look at the target part, then open its practice prompt and try to recreate the shade before reading the reveal.