Murder Drones Coloring Pages bring one of the most distinctive animated web series of recent years to your coloring table – and this collection of 50+ free pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com covers the full cast of Copper 9: Uzi Doorman and her railgun, N with his disarming smile and Disassembly Drone wings, V in full combat mode, J in her signature suit, Cyn in both her forms, Tessa, Doll, Khan, Nori, Thad, Lizzy, and the wider Worker Drone community that makes the world of this series feel genuinely inhabited. Whether you found the series through the pilot on YouTube or followed it episode by episode through the full run, this collection has something for every level of fan.
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What are Murder Drones?
Murder Drones is an animated web series created by Liam Vickers and produced by Glitch Productions, the studio that also produced the Helluva Boss and Hazbin Hotel properties. The pilot episode premiered on YouTube in March 2021 and immediately built a passionate fanbase drawn to its combination of dark humor, genuine emotional stakes, and strikingly designed robot characters. The full series began in June 2022.
The setting is Copper 9 – a frozen, desolate ice planet that was once a thriving industrial colony run by the megacorporation JCJenson. The colony was staffed by Worker Drones: humanoid robots built to mine resources and maintain the operation. When humanity abandoned Copper 9, they left the Worker Drones behind – and then, rather than allow potentially dangerous autonomous robots to simply exist unsupervised, they sent a second type of robot to eliminate them: Disassembly Drones, nicknamed in-universe as Murder Drones.
The series follows Uzi Doorman, a Worker Drone teenager living in one of the last surviving human-built bunkers on Copper 9, who wants to fight back against the Disassembly Drones rather than hide from them. Her story intersects with N, a Disassembly Drone whose core programming has somehow failed to erase his capacity for kindness, empathy, and an almost aggressive enthusiasm for everything around him. Together with N’s partner V, the three form an unlikely alliance while a much larger mystery about Copper 9, the Absolute Solver program, and the true nature of the drones gradually unfolds. You can find more robot and sci-fi character designs in our Robot Coloring Pages collection if you want to extend the theme beyond Murder Drones specifically.
Meet the Characters
Uzi Doorman is the series’ central protagonist – a Worker Drone teenager with a purple/lavender bob hairstyle, a dark gray robot body, and a signature purple hoodie worn over her chassis. Her visor displays amber/yellow eyes in normal situations and shifts to other expressions with her mood. She carries a custom railgun she built herself, which is as much a statement about her personality as it is a weapon. Her core palette is purple, dark gray, and amber-yellow – the purple of her hair and hoodie, the gray of her body, and the yellow of her eyes and energy effects. The Uzi Doorman, Uzi Doorman Classic Pose, Uzi Doorman with Railgun, and Uzi Casual Outfit pages all capture different aspects of her character.
N (no given name beyond the letter) is a Disassembly Drone – taller than Worker Drones, with a gray-white body, retractable wings, a tail, and a design that reads as simultaneously dangerous and completely non-threatening due to its perpetually cheerful expression. His visor displays yellow eyes that are almost constantly smiling. His overall palette is white-gray with yellow accents, and his pages range from the goofy tenderness of N Hugging Cute Plushie and N Patting Uzi’s Head to the full Disassembly Drone action of N Action Scene and N with his wings deployed.
V (Venomous) is N’s partner – another Disassembly Drone with a similar body structure but a darker, sharper design language that reflects her more aggressive and mission-focused personality. Where N reads as warm despite being a killing machine, V reads as cold despite having her own complex arc. Her pages – V the Murder Drone, V Flying Over Ruined City, V Action Coloring Page, V Holding Worker Drones – all capture her in her most powerful visual register: large mechanical wings, sharp claws, the visual weight of something genuinely dangerous.
J (Judgement) is the team leader of the original Disassembly Drone squad – recognizable by her more formal, suit-like design and her red X-pattern eyes in combat mode. She is more put-together and authoritative than N or V in visual terms, with a colder, more corporate aesthetic. Her pages – J the Murder Drone, J Drone Smiling Face, J With Rifle – capture both her composed professional exterior and the intensity of her combat stance.
Cyn is one of the most narratively significant characters in the series – a Worker Drone whose design shifts dramatically as the story progresses, from a deceptively innocent appearance to something connected to the Absolute Solver, the mysterious program that runs through the series’ mythology. Her Absolute Solver form features distinctive dark geometric elements and glowing purple energy. The Cyn from Murder Drones and Cyn Absolute Solver pages capture both versions of this character.
Tessa is a human character – rare in a series populated entirely by robots – who appears in the backstory of the Disassembly Drone program. Her presence connects the current events on Copper 9 to the historical decisions that created the conflict the series revolves around. The Murder Drones Tessa and Tessa pages show her in her period-appropriate design.
Doll is a Worker Drone with an Eastern European aesthetic and her own connection to the Absolute Solver – making her one of the most visually distinctive Worker Drones in the series, with a design that suggests both elegance and danger. The Doll from the Murder Drones page captures this contrast.
Khan Doorman is Uzi’s father – a Worker Drone in a safety coordinator role, with the larger build and more authoritative design that marks the adult Worker Drones. The Khan Doorman pages and his pairing with Nori capture the family context that gives Uzi’s story its emotional grounding.
Nori Doorman is Uzi’s mother, whose connection to the series’s larger mysteries becomes increasingly significant as the story develops. The Nori Doorman and Khan and Nori pages show the family unit that shaped Uzi.
Thad and Lizzy are Worker Drone teenagers in Uzi’s social circle. Thad has a larger, more relaxed design; Lizzy has a more decorative, fashion-conscious aesthetic with a bow and lighter coloring than most other Worker Drones. Both appear in multiple pages in the collection.
What’s Inside the Murder Drones Coloring Collection
The Uzi solo and action pages – Uzi Doorman, Uzi Doorman Classic Pose, Uzi Doorman with Railgun, Uzi Casual Outfit, Uzi Doorman Holding a Gun, Uzi from Murder Drones, Uzi Doorman Peace Sign – cover the full range of Uzi’s personality from relaxed confidence to armed and ready.
The N pages – N from Murder Drones, N Happy the Murder Drones, N Action Scene, N Hugging Cute Plushie, N Patting Uzi’s Head, N and Worker Drone Friendship – capture N across his full emotional range from playful to powerful, which is a bigger range than most characters in any animated series manage.
The V pages – V the Murder Drone, V Flying Over Ruined City, V Action Coloring Page, V Holding Worker Drones – are the most dramatic in the collection, all showing V in her most visually imposing configurations.
The pair and group pages – Uzi and N Smiling, Uzi and N Dancing, N and V Drone Talking, J N and Uzi Standing Together, N and Uzi Holding Hands, Murder Drones Trio Friends Circle Design, Murder Drones Trio Action – capture the central relationships of the series across a range of tones from warm to intense.
The Worker Drone community pages – Khan Doorman, Nori Doorman, Khan and Nori, Thad, Lizzy, Thad and Lizzy, Lizzy and Rebecca, Happy Worker Drone, Worker Drone with Hard Hat, Fallen Worker Drone, Worker Drones Selfie Scene – show the wider Copper 9 community that gives the series its human (or drone) texture beyond the main cast.
The special and seasonal pages – Murder Drones Christmas Santa Outfit, Murder Drones Christmas N Uzi V, Murder Drones Prom Night, Maid Dress Worker Drone, Uzi Casual Outfit – show the cast in costumes and scenarios outside the main series’ action-drama register.
Coloring Tips for Murder Drones Pages
Murder Drones has a specific visual palette built on contrast between warm and cold – the warm amber-yellow of drone eyes and energy effects against the cool grays and blacks of their robot bodies and the icy environments of Copper 9.
Uzi’s palette starts with her body: a medium to dark gray for the robot chassis, with deep purple-lavender for her hair and hoodie. Her visor eyes are warm amber-yellow – this is the warmest color in her design and should be kept bright and saturated to contrast with the cool grays and purples around it. Her railgun has the same metallic gray quality as her body, but can have subtle energy glow effects in the same amber-yellow at the charging points.
N’s palette is the lightest of the three main Disassembly Drones – a warm white-gray for his body rather than the cool gray of Worker Drones. His eyes are the same amber-yellow as Uzi’s, which is not accidental – it’s part of what makes him feel connected to the Worker Drones despite being sent to destroy them. His wings, when deployed, have a mechanical quality in the same white-gray, with darker gray at the joint articulations.
V’s palette runs darker than N’s – a cool mid-gray to dark gray, with sharper mechanical details that emphasize her aggressive design. Her claws and weapon deployments can be rendered in a slightly metallic silver-gray to distinguish them from the flat gray of her body.
J’s palette is the most formal and business-like: dark gray to near-black for her suit-like design, with red eyes in her standard mode that shift to X-pattern in combat. The red of her eyes is the primary warm color in her design and should be kept vivid to contrast with her otherwise cool, dark palette.
Cyn’s Absolute Solver form is the most technically interesting coloring challenge in the collection. The base is near-black with geometric angular shapes, and the key detail is the glowing purple of the Absolute Solver energy – a rich, saturated purple that transitions toward lighter lavender at the outer edges of the glow effect. Building this in layers (dark base, then adding the purple from the center outward) gives the most convincing result.
For the Copper 9 environment pages – V Flying Over Ruined City, N Action Scene with gothic architecture – the background palette is cold and desaturated: steel blues, gray-whites for ice and snow, dark near-blacks for the destroyed structures. Keeping the background cool and desaturated makes the characters’ eye colors and energy effects pop dramatically in contrast.
5 Activities to Do With Your Murder Drones Pages
Color the three Disassembly Drones as a matched set. Print one portrait page each for N, V, and J – three characters who share the same Disassembly Drone body type but have completely different personalities expressed through their design details. Color all three with the shared Disassembly Drone palette (white-gray body, amber eyes) but differentiate them through the specific details: N’s warmth, V’s sharpness, J’s formality. Arrange them side by side to show how three characters with the same origin can read as completely different people through color and detail.
Create a Copper 9 diorama. Print three or four pages and mount them against a large sheet of dark blue-gray paper you’ve decorated with ice formations, distant stars, and the ruined architecture of an abandoned human colony. Place the action pages toward the back and the quieter character pages in the foreground. The frozen planet setting is one of the most visually distinctive in any recent animated series, and building it around the colored pages gives context that a white background can’t provide.
Color Uzi’s emotional journey. Find pages showing Uzi in clearly different emotional states – the confident Uzi Doorman Classic Pose, the action-ready Uzi Doorman with Railgun, and a warmer page like the N and Uzi Holding Hands or Uzi and N Dancing. Color each with a slightly different treatment of her palette: her standard confident purple-and-gray for the action pages, and a warmer, slightly less saturated version for the pages where she’s in moments of connection rather than combat. The palette shift tells the story of her character arc.
Make a Worker Drone community display. Color the Khan Doorman, Nori Doorman, Thad, Lizzy, and Happy Worker Drone pages and arrange them as a portrait gallery of Copper 9’s surviving community – the people (or drones) who give the main conflict its stakes. Label each with their name and their role in the bunker community. For fans of the series who know how each of these characters develops, this display carries a specific emotional weight.
Color Cyn’s two forms as a before-and-after pair. Print the Cyn from the Murder Drones page and the Cyn Absolute Solver page. Color the first in a lighter, more innocent palette – the soft grays and warm eye tones of a normal Worker Drone. Color the second in the full Absolute Solver palette: near-black geometric forms, vivid purple glowing energy, the angular visual language of something that has transformed beyond its original design. Displayed side by side, these two pages tell one of the series’ most significant character arcs without a single word of text.
Download Your Free Murder Drones Pages Today!
All 50+ Murder Drones Coloring Pages are completely free – download as PDF to print or color online with one click. No sign-up, no cost. Whether you’ve watched every episode multiple times or you’re here because someone you know is obsessed with Uzi and N – we hope this collection gives you a way to spend more time with a series that genuinely earned its fanbase.
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