
Loading critic reviews...
Finding live streams...
Color Splash: Parrots is a puzzle game developed by Quantum Quiver Games that dropped on December 1 2025 for PC. It’s a single-player title centered on solving color-matching challenges using a squad of animated parrots. The setting is a gallery filled with vibrant bird paintings, and the goal is to restore their colors by completing puzzles. It’s a quick, lighthearted experience aimed at casual players, with a focus on simplicity and visual appeal. The game doesn’t aim to reinvent puzzles but leans into its charming art style and straightforward mechanics. If you’ve ever enjoyed match-3 games or color-based challenges, this might click.
Each level tasks you with guiding parrots to collect color droplets scattered in paintings. You tap to direct birds, drag to paint sections, and match hues to fill canvases. Later levels add time limits or shifting color palettes, requiring quicker reflexes. The core loop is simple: solve a puzzle, unlock the next, repeat. Controls are intuitive, with touch or mouse support, but some mini-games feel clunky. Sessions average 10, 15 minutes, making it ideal for short breaks. There’s no combat or dialogue, just pure puzzle-solving. The difficulty curve is uneven, with early levels being too easy and midgame puzzles introducing sudden complexity.
PlayPile users rate it 8.5/10 but with mixed feelings. 78% complete the game, and average playtime is 3.2 hours. Community moods split between “Calm” (45%) and “Frustrating” (30%). Critic reviews note it’s “a bright and breezy distraction” but “lacks depth.” One player wrote, “Relaxes the brain but the later levels are a slog.” Achievements (35 total) are easy but rewarding for collectors. The game’s price of $19.99 is reasonable, though some feel it overpromises on replay value. Steam reviews mirror this, with 62% positive but complaints about repetitive mechanics.
Color Splash: Parrots is best for players who want a low-effort, visually pleasing puzzle game. It’s cheap enough to justify as a time-killer but doesn’t offer lasting engagement. Casual audiences will appreciate the art and quick sessions, but hard-core puzzlers might find it too shallow. With 3.2 hours of content on average, it’s a fleeting diversion rather than a must-play. If you’re in the mood for something cheerful and brief, give it a shot. Otherwise, there are better puzzle games out there.
Game Modes
Single player
Finding deals...
Loading achievements...
Finding similar games...
Checking Bluesky...