The library is huge—hundreds of images, from simple flowers and mandalas to detailed landscapes and animals. You’re not locked into anything either. Start a picture, get bored, switch to another. No penalty, no pressure. The colors themselves are soft and warm, nothing garish. Each palette feels handpicked to soothe, not scream. And the zoom feature? Thank goodness. Those tiny numbered cells on a big mandala would drive me crazy without it.
There are a few rough edges. Some images are locked behind a daily reward or a short ad, which is fair for a free app. And occasionally a cell is so small you have to zoom way in, squinting at the number. But these are minor gripes. The app doesn’t shove ads in your face every two minutes—they pop up maybe once every few pictures, and you can skip most after a few seconds. That’s rare these days.
What I didn’t expect was how satisfying it feels to finish a page. You get this quiet sense of accomplishment, like you’ve made something pretty without any of the mess or frustration of real art. It’s not about skill. It’s about letting your brain take a break while your fingers do something simple.
If you’re the type who needs to fidget while listening to a podcast or wants to wind down after a long day, give this a shot. One tip: start with a small, simple image—like a single flower—and see how you feel after ten minutes. You might just forget to put the phone down.