Color Rhythm is a rhythm-based reflex game developed by ZapGames, released in November 2025 as an HTML5 browser game built on Unity WebGL. The concept…
Plrun March 29, 2026 ZapGames
Color Rhythm is a rhythm-based reflex game developed by ZapGames, released in November 2025 as an HTML5 browser game built on Unity WebGL.
2/12The concept sits somewhere between Geometry Dash and a pure rhythm game — you're navigating a glowing cube along a track of colored blocks that shift in time with electronic music, and every jump must land on the matching color.
3/12There are no health bars, no second chances, and no checkpoints within a level. A single mismatched landing ends the run. The game currently features five levels, each themed around a color and a distinct beat style.
4/12All five are available from the start with no sequential unlock requirement, letting players jump straight to whichever difficulty appeals to them.
5/12What pulls players into repeated attempts is the one-more-try tension: runs are short, death is instant, and the music makes each retry feel less like punishment and more like picking up where the beat left off.
6/12As a free online game, it works across desktop, mobile, and tablet browsers. Color Rhythm uses a single input: press any key on your keyboard or click the left mouse button to jump. That's the entire control scheme.
7/12Each jump switches your cube's color to the next one in sequence. On mobile and tablet, tap the screen. There is no movement control — the cube moves forward automatically, so your only decision is when to jump. Your cube has a color. The platform beneath it has a color.
8/12These must match. When the platform changes to a new color ahead of you, you jump to switch your cube's color before you reach that new section. If your cube rolls onto a block whose color doesn't match, the run ends immediately.
9/12The entire game revolves around reading the color transitions coming toward you and timing each jump to land on the correct section. The critical visual cue is where two differently colored blocks meet on the track — this boundary is your jump trigger.
10/12The ZapGames reference page specifically highlights this: focus on the transition point, not the blocks themselves. When you see the line where one color ends and another begins approaching, that's the moment to tap.
11/12By ZapGames — Play free in your browser, no downloads needed!