Toon Tone Characters Color List
Learn how to use a Toon Tone character color list with target parts, game target colors, HEX values, HSB values, and color prompts.
A Toon Tone character color list is not just a list of names. It is a reference for the color prompts used by the game: which character appears, which part is being asked about, what color value is used for scoring, and how that color is represented as HEX and HSB.
This guide explains how to read the character color list, what each field means, and how to use the reference without turning the game into a flat answer sheet.
Quick answer
Quick answer
A Toon Tone character color list is a reference page for the game’s color prompts. It shows each character, cartoon source, target part, game target color, HEX value, HSB value, and region. It helps players understand what color the game is asking for without pretending to be an official cartoon color database.
What is a Toon Tone character color list?
A Toon Tone character color list shows the target colors used in a Toon Tone-style color guessing game. Instead of only saying a character name, it explains the exact prompt: the character, the source, the target part, and the game target color.
This matters because a character can have many memorable colors. One prompt might ask for skin. Another might ask for a shirt, hat, hair, jacket, backpack, or accessory. The target part tells you what the game is actually testing.
What each character card means
| Field | What it means |
|---|---|
| Character | The cartoon character used in the prompt |
| Cartoon source | The show, film, or character universe |
| Target part | The specific part of the character the game asks about |
| Game target color | The color value used by this site for scoring |
| HEX | A web color code such as #FED90F |
| HSB | Hue, Saturation, and Brightness values |
| Region | A broad label for where the character source is associated |
Character
The character is the figure named in the game prompt. This is the part most players recognize first, but it is not enough on its own. Toon Tone also needs a target part.
Cartoon source
The source helps identify the show, film, or universe connected to the prompt. This can matter when a character has different versions or appears in more than one visual style.
Target part
The target part is the exact part of the character the round asks about. Examples include skin, hair, shirt, hat, pants, jacket, backpack, or another recognizable color area.
Game target color
The game target color is the color used by this site for scoring. It is the value your submitted color is compared against after you press submit.
HEX
HEX is a compact web color code, such as #FED90F. It is useful when you want an exact reference value.
HSB
HSB stands for Hue, Saturation, and Brightness. It matches the way Toon Tone is played because players adjust those three dimensions during a round.
HEX vs HSB in Toon Tone
HEX and HSB describe the same color in different ways. HEX is compact and precise. HSB is easier to read when you are trying to understand a miss in a color guessing game.
If your score breakdown says Hue was close but Saturation was off, the HSB value gives you a direct way to understand the mistake. HEX tells you the exact target. HSB tells you how the target behaves inside the game controls.
Why target parts matter
A character name alone can be ambiguous. SpongeBob, for example, has a body color, shorts, tie, shoes, and other details. The target part makes the challenge specific.
Target parts also make the game fairer. Instead of asking you to guess any color connected to a character, the prompt asks for one specific color area that the game can reveal and score.
Are these Toon Tone answers?
This page shows the game target colors used by this independent Toon Tone-style game. You can use it as a color reference, but the game is more fun if you try a run before checking the list.
A good way to use the list is to play first, read your result card, then check the character color list if you want to understand the exact target color.
Are these official cartoon colors?
Important note
This is an independent Toon Tone-style color reference. The colors shown are game target colors for this site, not official cartoon studio color references.
Cartoon colors can vary by episode, production era, screenshot, lighting, compression, and style guide. For this reason, the page describes values as game target colors rather than official colors.
How to use the list without ruining the game
- Play a five-round run before checking the list.
- Use the list after a result card to understand what the target color was.
- Compare your HSB miss with the target HSB values.
- Use the list to practice target parts that repeatedly confuse you.
- Do not memorize every HEX value first if you want the game to stay challenging.
Related Toon Tone resources
Frequently asked questions
What is a Toon Tone color list?
It is a reference page that shows the game target colors for Toon Tone character prompts, including target parts, HEX values, HSB values, sources, and regions.
Are these Toon Tone correct colors?
They are the game target colors used by this independent Toon Tone-style game, not official cartoon studio color references.
Why does the list show target parts?
Target parts make each prompt specific. The game asks for one part of a character, such as skin, hair, clothing, or an accessory.
Should I read the color list before playing?
You can, but the game is more fun if you play first and use the list afterward to understand the target values.
Ready to test your Toon Tone color memory?
Play a five-round Toon Tone challenge, then come back to these guides to understand your score breakdown and character color targets.