You know those satisfying color-by-number apps your mom's probably addicted to? This is basically that, but with sparkly "diamond" pieces instead of paint. The goal is simple: match numbers, tap the grid, and fill in gorgeous patterns one gem at a time. It's pure zen mode—no timers, no enemies, just you and a glittery canvas. Perfect for when you need to zone out without actually thinking.
Getting started takes about five seconds. There's no tutorial because you don't need one.
You see a numbered grid and a color palette at the bottom. Tap a color, then tap or drag your stylus over every cell with that matching number. The game places a shiny "diamond" on each spot. It's like filling in a coloring book, but with way more bling.
Once you get the hang of it, you'll unlock multi-placer tools—basically a stamp that fills 4+ cells in one tap. This is where the game shifts from chill to "okay, let me blast through this pattern in three minutes." You still follow the numbers, but now you're moving way faster.
Finish a design, watch it sparkle, and move to the next one. The game tracks how many gems you've placed and unlocks new images as you go. Some patterns are simple (hearts, stars), others are more detailed (animals, landscapes). The progression is steady—no sudden difficulty spikes.
This is for anyone who likes low-stress, repetitive tasks that look pretty when you're done. If you're the type who watches ASMR videos or fidgets with pop-its, this is your jam. Kids can play it easily—there's zero violence or confusing mechanics. It's also solid for commutes or waiting rooms. You can pick it up for two minutes or lose an hour without realizing. Not for competitive gamers or anyone who needs a challenge—this is literally just tapping numbers in order.
It feels exactly like those physical diamond painting kits you see at craft stores, but without the mess. The visuals are super simple—flat gradients, basic 3D gems, and lots of bloom effects to make everything look shinier than it actually is. No music really stood out to me; it's just light background tunes that fade into the background. Honestly, I played most of it while listening to a podcast. The whole experience is meditative. Your brain turns off, your fingers do the work, and you get a tiny hit of satisfaction every time a section fills in.
Your progress saves automatically in the browser cache, so you can close the tab and come back later without losing anything. Just don't clear your browsing data, or you'll start over. Performance-wise, this thing runs smooth as butter. No lag, no stuttering—even on my older tablet. It's optimized for mobile first, so the touch controls feel way better than desktop clicking, but both work fine.
A solid time-killer if you're into relaxing, repetitive tasks. Just know what you're signing up for—this isn't a "game" in the traditional sense.
Super responsive. No weird delays or missed inputs. Honestly feels better on a phone screen than with a mouse.
Developed by Mirra Games and released on December 30, 2025. Pretty fresh out of the oven.