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Find All 9: Fantasy is a casual adventure game from Very Very Little Studio, released in October 2025. It tasks you with hunting hidden objects across three distinct areas: a fairytale village, a bustling mage city, and dragon-ruled islands. The game blends exploration with light puzzle-solving, using a paint-by-numbers mechanic where finding items unlocks colorization in a world that’s initially monochrome. Aimed at players seeking chill, methodical challenges, it’s available on PC, Mac, and Linux. The elevator pitch? “Color the world by finding stuff.”
Each session involves scanning environments for hidden items, which are hinted via icons or vague descriptions. Controls are simple, clicking to interact, dragging to highlight objects. The mage city has dense crowds to navigate, while dragon islands feature large, serene vistas. Once you find all items in an area, it gradually fills with color, revealing new visual details. Progress is linear but optional: backtracking unlocks bonus colors. Sessions last 15, 30 minutes, with the total playtime averaging 8.5 hours. The core loop is repetitive but soothing, with subtle rewards in how the world transforms.
PlayPile users rate it 4.1/5, with 78% completing 90%+ of objects. The average playthrough takes 8.5 hours, and 65% finish in under 10. Community moods are mostly “satisfying” (42%) and “relaxing” (37%), but “boring” lingers at 11%. One review: “Great for killing 20 minutes, but the dragon island puzzles drag.” Achievement completion is 82%, with 70% unlocking the “Color Master” badge. Critics note it’s a “zen, bite-sized experience” but “lacks depth for hardcore explorers.”
Find All 9: Fantasy is a low-effort, high-reward pick for casual players. It’s perfect for short breaks, with 90% of players hitting the main goal in under 10 hours. While repetitive, the visual payoff of colorizing the world keeps it engaging. Priced at $14.99, it’s a budget-friendly distraction. Skip if you crave complex puzzles or open-ended exploration. For a laid-back, meditative session, it hits the mark, but don’t expect anything fresh.
Game Modes
Single player
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