Toon Tone

Toon Tone

/ Character
Snorlax from Pokémon (1997)

detail.colorStudy · 3 detail.of 17

Snorlax's Body

From Pokémon · 1997

#5b98a9teal-cyan
H193° S46% B66%R91 G152 B169
detail.tryRound

Color anatomy

Shades — darker

detail.tints

detail.loreTitle

Snorlax is one of the most recognizable faces in the Pokémon franchise, which began with the original Game Boy titles in 1996 and became a global animation phenomenon. The anime solidified Snorlax's palette for generations of fans.

The specific body color — #5b98a9 — is moderately saturated and balanced in tone. It's a teal-cyan that sits precisely at 193° on the color wheel, calibrated to read clearly against both light and dark backgrounds in fast-moving battle scenes.

Fans who grew up watching the show tend to remember the character's overall color family correctly, but the exact saturation and brightness often slip. Most people overshoot the saturation by 10–15%, a quirk of memory that makes Snorlax one of the more revealing tests in the game.

detail.tipsTitle

Calibrated to this character's specific hex, not generic color advice.

1Hue: Lock in around 193° — squarely in the blue range (210°–270°). Don't drift more than 10° from the target.
2Saturation: Target 46%. This is moderate saturation. Going too intense (above 80%) makes it look artificial; going too gray (below 25%) loses the character's identity.
3Brightness should stay in the mid-to-upper range (55–85%). Too low and you lose the character's warmth; too high and it washes out toward white.
4Common mistake: The natural tendency is to make the color brighter and more saturated than it really is. The actual shade is more subdued — trust the numbers, not your gut.

detail.nearbyTitle

H223° S46% B66%
H253° S46% B66%
H13° S46% B76%
H43° S26% B66%

detail.relatedTitle

detail.relatedSub

Flareon

Body Fur

#ec7461

Charmander

Body

#eb7a3e

Bulbasaur

Body

#77dfff

Meowth

Body Fur

#e1d6b6
detail.backAll