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Provided by AGPBy AI, Created 4:33 PM UTC, May 18, 2026, /AGP/ – Color Memory Game has launched a free browser-based daily challenge at colormemorygame.com that asks players to recreate a briefly shown color from memory and ranks them with print-industry scoring. The game aims to turn a common perception test into a daily puzzle, with a global leaderboard, multiplayer modes and no signup required.
Why it matters: - Color Memory Game turns short-term visual memory into a daily competition that is easy to access on desktop and mobile browsers. - The game uses the same CIEDE2000 color-difference standard found in commercial print and display calibration, giving the challenge a scientific scoring basis. - Designers, photographers, print technicians and color-calibration professionals can use the game as a quick training drill.
What happened: - Color Memory Game launched a free browser-based daily challenge at colormemorygame.com. - The daily mode gives every player the same five colors worldwide, resets at midnight UTC and ranks results on a global leaderboard. - Each round shows a solid color for four seconds, then replaces it with three sliders for hue, saturation and brightness. - Players rebuild the color from memory and receive a score from 0 to 100 based on perceptual distance from the target. - Five rounds make a complete session.
The details: - The game scores guesses with CIEDE2000, a color-difference metric published by the International Commission on Illumination. - CIEDE2000 weights hue errors more heavily than saturation or brightness errors, matching how people perceive color differences. - A short explainer on the math behind the formula is available in a published article on why the game scores with CIEDE2000. - The game is free to play, requires no signup and runs on desktop and mobile browsers. - The core product is positioned in the same daily-puzzle category as Wordle and GeoGuessr. - Beyond daily play, the game includes solo modes in easy and hard difficulty, Arena head-to-head matchmaking, multiplayer rooms accessed by four-character invite code, themed bot challenges and variant modes including Speed, Stack, Blind, Gradient, Whispers and Imposter. - All modes use the same CIEDE2000 scoring system.
Between the lines: - The product is built around a well-known limit in visual working memory, where people can retain only a few discrete items and a remembered color can drift within seconds. - The game’s design reflects that hue tends to survive memory better than saturation or brightness, which may explain why many players struggle even when a color feels obvious. - The company says players often overestimate their color recall until they see their first score, then improve as they learn to lock in hue first. - A long-form article on the game’s site discusses opponent color channels, working-memory limits, canonical-color drift and the role of verbal labels in recall.
What’s next: - The global leaderboard and daily reset give the game a recurring format that can keep players returning each day. - The company is also using bot opponents, multiplayer rooms and variant modes to expand play beyond the single daily puzzle. - The game’s published science content suggests a strategy-focused audience may continue to treat the product as both entertainment and practice.
The bottom line: - Color Memory Game is trying to make color recall as repeatable and competitive as any other daily browser puzzle, while grounding the scoring in a standard used by print and display professionals.
Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.
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