Dandy’s World Coloring Pages bring the charming and quietly unsettling cast of one of Roblox’s most talked-about games to life in a brand-new way – and we are so glad to share this collection with you at ColoringPagesOnly.com! With 40+ free pages featuring Dandy, Vee, Goob, Sprout, and the full roster of Toons from the Underground, this collection is made for every fan who loves the game’s unique mix of retro warmth and creeping horror.
Every page is completely free – download as PDF or color online with one click. No sign-up, no cost.
What Is Dandy’s World?
Dandy’s World is a Roblox horror-survival game that became one of the most-played games on the platform in 2024. Players wake up inside The Underground – a sprawling, retro-styled research facility built in a cheerful 1960s aesthetic, all warm yellows and rounded corners and friendly-looking signage that makes the danger feel even more unexpected when it arrives.
The goal is to explore the floors of the facility, collect Tapes, repair machines, and make it to the elevator – all while avoiding the Twisteds. Twisteds are corrupted, monstrous versions of the game’s regular cast of characters, called Toons. In their normal form, Toons are friendly and helpful, each with a distinctive shape and personality. In their Twisted form, they transform into something much harder to look at calmly – stretched, distorted, and relentless.
What makes Dandy’s World stand out from other Roblox horror games is that contrast. The art style is genuinely cute. The characters are genuinely likable. And then things go wrong in a way that feels all the more unsettling because of how warm and friendly the baseline world is. Kids and teenagers who play it tend to love both sides – the cozy Toon designs and the tension of navigating the Underground – and the coloring pages in this collection lean into the former: the characters as they appear in their friendly, colorful, fully human forms.
Meet the Toons
Dandy is the flower-headed host of the Underground and the central figure of the game’s mysteries. He appears cheerful, charming, and performatively welcoming – always holding his cane, always smiling with his wide daisy-petal head. His color palette is bright yellow for the flower petals, black for his body and suit, with gold accents on the cane. Dandy is the most visually theatrical character in the collection, and his pages tend to be the ones fans color most carefully.
Vee has a vintage television set for a head – a rounded CRT monitor with a glowing screen face, mounted on a human-shaped body. She is one of the most technically interesting pages to color because of the screen: the face itself works best in a soft, warm white or light green (like an old phosphor monitor), while the TV casing is medium gray with darker gray trim. Her outfit runs in muted purple tones. The page featuring Vee and Gigi together in an outdoor setting is one of the gentler pages in the collection.
Goob is the square-headed, stretch-armed character who looks like something between a friendly robot and a worn-out plush toy. His body is simple and rounded, his face always carries a slightly tired but good-natured expression, and his color palette is warm tan and earthy brown – he is one of the easiest pages for younger colorists to approach, with large, simple shapes and very little fine detail.
Sprout is a log – literally a short, cylindrical wooden stump with a small green sprout growing from the top and a simple face on the front. His colors are natural wood brown with a bright green shoot on top, and his pages are consistently among the most charming in the collection. The Sprout and Cosmo page, where he is caught mid-action, and the Sprout of Dandy’s World portrait page both show why this character has developed such a devoted fan following – there is something irreducibly appealing about a little log with feelings.
Cosmo has X marks for eyes – a character whose vacant, crossed-out expression gives them a slightly eerie quality even in their friendly Toon form. Their palette runs in soft lavender and light purple tones, and the page showing them alongside Sprout in a street scene is one of the more dynamic compositions in the batch.
Teagan is the cup-headed character – a cheerful disposable-cup shape with a lid and straw, carrying themselves with a kind of casual confidence. Their palette is white and cream for the cup body, with warm accent colors on the outfit. The Teagan and Pebble page, showing Teagan at a table with food while tiny Pebble looks up from the floor, is one of the warmest domestic scenes in the collection.
Pebble is tiny, rounded, and perpetually underfoot – a small, elongated stone-shaped companion who appears in several pages as a secondary character alongside others. Color them in smooth, cool gray with simple dot eyes.
Gigi is recognizable by her headband and expressive face – one of the more human-proportioned characters in the cast, which makes her design a nice contrast to the more abstract shapes around her. Her pages work well with warm skin tones and bright accent colors on her outfit and headband.
Shelly has a shell-like quality to her design – soft curves, gentle colors, a slightly shy expression. Her palette is pastel and light, making her pages among the best choices for younger colorists who prefer softer, less saturated coloring sessions.
Astro is the space-themed Toon – a character with cosmic visual elements, including stars, deep blues, and a helmet-like head shape. The Astro Playing Game page and the Dandy and Astro Playing page are the most playful in the collection, capturing the lighter side of life in the Underground.
The Bassie Twins are identical in design – both carrying floral decorations on their heads – but always depicted with different expressions: one smiling, one sad. The page featuring them standing in a flower field is one of the most emotionally layered images in the whole collection, playing quietly on the theme of reflection and duality that runs through the game.
What’s Inside the Dandy’s World Coloring Collection
The character portrait and duo pages form the backbone of the collection – individual portraits of Dandy, Goob, Sprout, and Vee alongside paired pages like Vee and Gigi, Teagan and Pebble, Dandy and Pebble, Vee and Shelly, and Sprout and Cosmo. These are the pages fans reach for first, and they range from simple enough for younger kids (Goob, Pebble, Sprout) to complex enough to challenge an experienced colorist (Dandy, Vee, Astro).
The group pages – the Diverse Characters Lineup, Group Shot, Group of Characters Expressions, Fun Characters in Dandy’s World – show multiple Toons together and are particularly good for fans who want to practice keeping a consistent palette across an entire cast. The Lineup page, which shows the full roster of different head shapes side by side, is one of the best single-page introductions to the whole game’s aesthetic.
The action and horror-adjacent pages – Chasing Scene, Angry Characters and Monsters, Log and Monster Characters, Dandy Monster – lean into the game’s darker side. The Dandy Monster page, showing the twisted form of the flower-headed host, is the most intense page in the collection; the contrast between his usual cheerful yellow and the darker, distorted Twisted version is where the game’s emotional core lives.
The everyday and cozy pages – Dandy Picking Flowers, Dandy and Vee Dancing, Dandy and Astro Playing, Characters Baking and Eating Cake, Characters at the Shop, Sleepover scenes – show the Toons in moments of normalcy and warmth. These pages are the ones that feel most like a vacation from the Underground, and they are consistently the most requested for printing.
The thematic pages – Halloween Dandy’s World, the TV Head Character Singing page, and the Logo with Characters spread – round out the collection with seasonal and decorative options.
Coloring Tips for Dandy’s World Pages
The visual world of Dandy’s World is built on a retro 1960s color palette – warm yellows, mustard golds, dusty pinks, forest greens, and a lot of cream and ivory backgrounds. The Underground itself is warm-lit and institutional, and that warmth should carry through even the character pages.
For Dandy, the key is the contrast between his bright, flower-yellow petals and his formal black suit. Use a saturated, warm yellow for the petals – closer to sunflower or golden yellow than pale lemon – and build the center of the flower in a deeper amber or dark gold. The suit is best in pure black with very subtle blue-black shadow, and the cane in warm gold. His face, visible in the center of the flower, is usually small and pale – a warm ivory works well.
For Vee, the TV screen face is the most interesting element. Try coloring it in a very pale cool green or warm white, with slightly brighter tones at the center to suggest the old CRT glow effect. The TV casing in medium gray with darker gray trim creates the right vintage hardware feeling. Keep her outfit in muted purple-gray to stay in the desaturated, retro register of the game’s palette.
For the Twisteds and horror pages (Dandy Monster, Angry Characters and Monsters, Log and Monster Characters), desaturation is your friend. Take the normal character colors and drain the warmth out of them – turn the friendly yellow into a sickly greenish-yellow, the warm browns into cold gray-brown, the cheerful pinks into faded dusty mauves. Adding very dark shadows under the eyes and at the edges of forms creates the unsettling effect without needing to add any new colors at all.
For the group and lineup pages, pick your palette before you start and stick to it across all characters. The Diverse Characters Lineup page especially rewards planning: write out which color you’ll use for each character before touching paper, then work across the whole row consistently. The final result looks much more like an official character sheet than if you pick colors as you go.
For the cozy everyday pages – Baking and Eating Cake, Picking Flowers, Dancing – lean into warm, saturated cheerfulness. These pages are the opposite of the Twisted horror aesthetic, and they look best when the colors are full and bright rather than muted or desaturated.
5 Activities to Do With Your Dandy’s World Pages
Create your own Toon. The game’s character design follows a clear logic – characters have simple geometric objects for heads (a TV, a flower, a log, a cup, a square) mounted on human-like bodies. After coloring the existing Toons, try designing your own: pick an everyday object for a head, sketch it out on plain paper, and give it a personality and color palette. This is one of the most genuinely creative activities you can do with this collection, and Dandy’s World fans who love the game’s lore tend to take character design seriously.
Color a Toon and its twisted version. Print two copies of the same character page – say, the Dandy portrait and the Dandy Monster page. Color the first version in full cheerful Dandy colors. Then color the second version as a Twisted: same colors, but desaturated, with deeper shadows, harsher lines emphasized in darker pencil. Display them side by side. The contrast between the two is the whole emotional argument of the game, visualized.
Build a scene. Choose pages that naturally belong together – Dandy and Pebble at the shop, then the Characters at the Shop spread, then the Group Shot – and color them to match, using the same palette throughout. Arrange them on a wall or a board in sequence. You’ve made a visual scene that feels like a moment frozen from inside the Underground.
Make character identification cards. Color the Bassie Twins page, the Diverse Characters Lineup, and the individual character pages, then cut out each Toon and mount them on small cards. On the back, write the character’s name, their head shape, their main colors, and one personality trait. These become a personal field guide to the cast – useful for anyone who is still learning which character is which.
Host a Dandy’s World coloring session with friends. Print the same group page – the Characters Group Shot or the Diverse Characters Lineup – for each person, and have everyone color the same image independently. When everyone is done, compare: the palette choices will be completely different, and seeing five versions of the same characters side by side is a quick demonstration of how much personality lives in color choice alone.
Download Your Free Dandy’s World Pages Today!
All 40+ Dandy’s World Coloring Pages are completely free – download as PDF to print at home, or color online in your browser with one click. No sign-up, no cost. Whether you’re a Roblox regular who’s been in the Underground since launch or a parent looking for a creative activity to go with your kid’s current favorite game, we hope this collection gives you something great to color.
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