A brand palette quiz for multi-color logos
Most LogoColorQuiz modes deal with one primary color. Brand Palette Quiz is about the brands that refuse to pick just one — Google's four colors, Microsoft's window panes, Slack's pinwheel, eBay's letters. You are shown a grid of swatches and must select the colors that actually belong to the brand's palette.
Decoys are close cousins of the real colors, shifted in hue just enough to feel plausible. Knowing that Google uses a red is not enough; you have to know which red.
How to play the palette quiz
Each game has five rounds, one multi-color brand per round. The prompt tells you how many colors the palette has. Tap swatches to select them, tap again to deselect, and submit when your selection count matches the palette size.
Scoring is proportional: each correctly selected palette color earns its share of 100 points, so partial credit is real. Five rounds add up to the familiar 500-point result with spoiler-free sharing.
Why palettes are harder than single colors
A single brand color is one memory. A palette is a set of relationships — which green sits next to which blue, how warm the yellow runs. Brands drill these combinations into you through repetition, but the individual shades blur together.
The mode uses documented public palette approximations, and like every LogoColorQuiz mode it avoids showing complete logo artwork. The colors are the whole puzzle.