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Mr. Bean Coloring Book

Category: Arcade, Puzzle Plays: 19 Rating:
(0.0 / 0)

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Game Overview

Okay, so Mr. Bean Coloring Book is exactly what it sounds like, but maybe not in the way you'd expect. It's a digital coloring book, not a platformer or anything. You pick from six scenes from the show--like Mr. Bean at the swimming pool or trying to paint his room--and you just color them in. The art style is cartoony, obviously, but it's got that slightly faded, hand-drawn look from the original series, not some glossy reboot. There's a 24-color palette, which is pretty standard, but you can mix stuff up or just go wild. The vibe is super chill unless you want it to be frantic. There's a timer mode where you race to finish before the clock runs out, and that gets a bit stressful because Mr. Bean's face is just there, waiting. But you can also just take your time, no pressure. It feels like sitting down with a coloring book and crayons as a kid, except you're on a tablet or phone. The controls are just tap or drag, so it's dead simple. Who'd get hooked? Honestly, little kids who love the show, but also adults who need a brain-off activity. I tried it while half-watching TV and it worked fine. The sound effects are just occasional grunts from Mr. Bean, which is weirdly soothing. Not a game you'll play for hours, but for ten minutes of silly relaxation, it's fine.

About Mr. Bean Coloring Book

So this is Mr. Bean Coloring Book, which is exactly what it sounds like -- a digital coloring book featuring that weird little guy from the show. You pick one of six scenes: there's Mr. Bean driving his lime green Mini with the armchair on top, him at the beach in his swim trunks that ride up too high, the Christmas dinner disaster with the turkey on his head, him painting a room and somehow getting paint on the ceiling fan, the classic exam scene where he's cheating with a tiny rubber band contraption, and the one where he's at the laundromat and his teddy bear gets shrunk. Each one is a line drawing waiting for color. You get 24 colors in a palette at the bottom, which is a decent spread -- there's the usual reds, blues, yellows, but also some weird ones like 'lime surprise' and 'teddy bear brown' that are specific to Mr. Bean's world. The core loop is simple: you tap or click a color, then tap the area you want to fill. The game auto-fills within the lines, which is actually nice because doing it pixel by pixel would be torture. There's a timer option that unlocks after you finish your first picture in free mode -- it gives you a countdown, and you try to complete the scene faster than your previous time. That's where the challenge creeps in. The difficulty isn't from the coloring itself, but from the timer pressure and the fact that some areas are tiny, like Mr. Bean's fingers or the spokes on his Mini's wheels. You have to pick colors fast and click accurately, or you'll waste seconds on missed taps. Later scenes have more complex details -- the Christmas one has like 40 separate fill zones, including the turkey's feathers and the shattered plate pieces. The satisfying moment is when you finish a full picture and it does a little animation -- Mr. Bean's eyes blink or the Mini drives a few pixels forward. You can save completed pictures to a gallery, which holds up to 12, or print them out, which is cute if you have a printer. There's no score system outside the timer, no upgrades, no enemies -- it's just you, the colors, and Mr. Bean's goofy face. The controls are just mouse or touch, no keyboard shortcuts, which is fine because you're mostly just tapping. What's weird is the game doesn't tell you that some colors are locked until you've colored a certain number of areas -- I discovered that by accident when I clicked a grayed-out 'rainbow' option and it said 'unlock after 50 fills.' So there's that small progression thing hidden under the surface. The music is that familiar Mr. Bean theme on loop, which gets annoying after ten minutes, but you can turn it off in the settings. Overall it's a chill time-killer, not deep, but the timer mode gives it some replay value for people who like speedrunning coloring books.

Tips & Tricks

The timer is your biggest enemy in score mode, but you can pause it by opening the color palette menu--just don't close it too fast or the clock starts again. I wasted my first few runs picking colors slowly. Click directly on the area you want to fill, but watch out: if there's a tiny gap in the outline, the color leaks everywhere and ruins your picture. Zooming in helps spot those sneaky cracks before you paint. You don't have to fill every single space--leaving some areas white actually makes the scene pop more, especially around Mr. Bean's face. The undo button is a lifesaver, but it only works for the last three actions, so don't go wild experimenting without planning. For high scores, focus on the largest sections first because they give the most points per second. Smaller spots like Teddy's nose or the car's headlights can wait until the end. If you're playing relaxed mode, try mixing colors by layering--paint a light color first, then a darker one over it while it's still wet (on same device it blends weirdly). Also, the save gallery has a limit of 10 pics, so delete old ones you don't love. Printing looks better if you set your printer to high quality, otherwise the colors come out muddy.

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