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Hair Salon 3D

Category: 3D, Girls Plays: 1 Rating:
(0.0 / 0)

How to Play

Game Overview

I picked up Hair Salon 3D expecting something pretty shallow, but it actually has more going on than I thought. The visual style is bright and cartoony -- not trying to be realistic, just colorful and clean, which works fine for the phone screen. You're basically running a little salon where clients show up with wild requests, like a mohawk or some complicated layered cut. The fun part is figuring out how to match the 3D preview they give you -- you can rotate it and zoom, which helps a ton. The tools feel okay; scissors let you snip away bits, clippers buzz down large areas fast, and the razor is for finer details around the edges. There's a bit of a learning curve with the camera controls because you have to pinch and rotate while cutting, which can get clumsy at first. Coloring is straightforward -- pick the brush, choose a dye, and swipe it on. What gets you hooked is the rating system -- getting three stars feels satisfying, and the tips you earn let you buy better gear or unlock harder styles. The daily challenges keep things fresh, and the VIP clients demand real precision. Honestly, it''s a chill time waster for anyone who likes casual simulation games or just wants to mess around with hair without any real consequences. It''s not deep, but it''s surprisingly neat for what it is.

About Hair Salon 3D

Hair Salon 3D drops you into a busy little shop where clients wander in with very specific hairstyle requests. You'll see a card pop up on the right side of the screen showing a 3D preview of what they want -- tap it to rotate and check the angles before you start cutting. The game gives you five tools: scissors for snipping precise shapes, clippers for buzzing down large areas evenly, a razor for adding texture and sharp lines, a comb for parting hair, and a color brush for dye jobs. Your main actions are swiping across the head to cut or color, pinching to zoom in on tricky spots, and rotating the camera with two fingers to see behind the ears or the nape of the neck. When you think you're done, hit 'Done' and the game grades your work from one to three stars based on how close you matched the reference. More stars mean bigger tips and more in-game cash.

The early levels are simple -- basic trims and single-color dyes on friendly clients like 'Emily' or 'Jake' who just want a clean bob or a crew cut. But around level 8, things get real. You'll get requests like 'The Mohawk' or 'The Undercut' that require careful sectioning with the comb and precise razor work for the fade. Coloring becomes trickier too -- some clients want ombre effects or streaks, so you have to apply dye patch by patch and blend the edges. The rating system is harsh -- a two-star finish barely rewards you, and missing the shape entirely drops you to one star with almost no payout. That's when the grind kicks in.

What's actually satisfying is nailing a complex cut like 'The Long Layers' -- you have to snip each layer separately while keeping the length consistent, and seeing the preview match your final result feels great. The daily challenges shake things up by giving you a random hairstyle with a time limit, which forces faster decisions and messier cuts sometimes. You unlock new tools and dyes in the shop using your earnings -- the 'Pro Scissors' cut faster and cleaner, and 'Bright Red' or 'Pastel Blue' dyes open up more client requests. VIP clients like 'Mr. Sterling' show up later and demand near-perfect scores for huge tip bonuses, but they're also more likely to leave bad reviews if you mess up. The loop is simple: earn cash, buy upgrades, tackle harder styles, repeat. It gets repetitive after a while, but the moment you finally ace that tricky asymmetric cut makes it worth the frustration.

Tips & Tricks

The 3D preview card isn't just for show -- rotate it fully before you start cutting. I'd miss angles on layered cuts and end up with a lopsided disaster until I started spinning that preview around. Scissors are best for bulk removal, but the razor is the real MVP for texturing and blending; clippers leave harsh lines if you're not careful. When you're using the color brush, don't just swipe once -- the saturation builds with each stroke, so a single pass gives a weak tint. I wasted coins early on buying dyes I didn't need; focus on unlocking the clippers and razor first since they unlock more hairstyles faster. The rating system is stingy with precision -- even a tiny uneven patch on the back of the head drops you from 5 stars to 3, so check your work from the side angles by pinching the camera. Daily challenges are worth doing even if you bomb them because the currency rewards stack up, and you can retry levels anytime without losing tools. One weird trick: if you mess up a cut badly, just exit to the menu and restart -- the game doesn't save your progress until you hit 'Done', so don't feel locked in.

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