Satoru Gojo Coloring Pages bring one of the most iconic characters in contemporary anime to your coloring table – and this collection of 20+ free pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com captures the strongest sorcerer in Jujutsu Kaisen across his full range: battle poses, sitting portraits, the chibi and funny versions that capture his personality’s more playful dimension, and the technically demanding pages that show his cursed technique effects and the luminous blue of his Six Eyes. Gojo’s visual design is one of the most color-specific in all of anime – two elements define him immediately in any illustration: his white hair and his eyes – and this collection provides ample space to work with both. The wider world of anime illustration on the site begins with our Anime Coloring Pages hub.
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Who Is Satoru Gojo?
Satoru Gojo is a central character in Jujutsu Kaisen (呪術廻戦), a manga series written and illustrated by Gege Akutami, serialized in Weekly Shōnen Jump from March 2018. The anime adaptation is produced by MAPPA – the same studio behind Attack on Titan: The Final Season and Chainsaw Man – with Season 1 airing in 2020–2021, a prequel film Jujutsu Kaisen 0 releasing in 2021 (2022 internationally), and Season 2 airing in 2023.
The world of Jujutsu Kaisen is built around cursed energy – negative emotions that accumulate in the world and manifest as cursed spirits, dangerous creatures that prey on humans. Jujutsu sorcerers are humans who can channel and use cursed energy to combat these spirits, and they operate from organizations like Jujutsu High (Tokyo Jujutsu Metropolitan Curse Technical College), where Gojo serves as a teacher.
Satoru Gojo is, by the consensus of every character in the series, the strongest jujutsu sorcerer in the world – a fact he is entirely and cheerfully aware of. He is 28 years old during the main story’s timeline, a teacher at Jujutsu High who mentors the protagonist Yuji Itadori, along with Megumi Fushiguro and Nobara Kugisaki. Despite his formal role as an educator, his approach to teaching is unconventional – he operates on the principle that strength must be met with strength, and he is as likely to throw a student into a dangerous situation as to explain theory.
His cursed technique is called Limitless – an ability passed down through the Gojo family that allows him to manipulate space itself at an atomic level, making the space around him infinitely divisible and thus effectively creating an invisible barrier between himself and anything trying to reach him. This passive application of Limitless is called Infinity, and it is always active: any attack, any projectile, any physical contact is perpetually approaching but never quite arriving, slowed to zero at the boundary of Infinity’s reach.
Within Limitless, he also commands Blue (a technique that creates a point of attraction, collapsing surrounding space toward it), Red (the inverse – a repulsive force that blasts space and anything in it outward), and their combined manifestation, Hollow Purple, which creates an imaginary mass that erases anything in its path. His ultimate technique is his Domain Expansion: Unlimited Void, which floods the target’s mind with infinite simultaneous information, paralyzing them completely.
Most critically for visual purposes: Gojo possesses the Six Eyes – an extraordinarily rare ocular ability that allows him to perceive cursed energy with perfect precision and efficiency, essentially making his Infinity infinitely sustainable where it would exhaust any other user. His Six Eyes are the single most visually distinctive element of his design – luminous, pale teal-blue eyes that glow with an almost supernatural quality whenever shown directly.
What’s Inside the Satoru Gojo Collection
The combat and power pages – Satoru Gojo Fighting, Satoru Gojo Poster – show Gojo in battle configuration, the compositions that most directly engage with the visual drama of his cursed technique and physical presence. These pages call for the most technically demanding coloring work in the collection – cursed energy effects, dynamic pose rendering, and the specific luminous quality of his Six Eyes when activated.
The personality and casual pages – Happy Satoru Gojo, Satoru Gojo Says Hi, Satoru Gojo Talking, Satoru Gojo is Sitting, Satoru Gojo Using Phone, Satoru Gojo Dancing, Satoru Gojo Dreaming, Funny Satoru Gojo – capture the dimension of Gojo’s character that makes him as beloved as his combat ability: his personality. He is playful, self-confident to the point of casual arrogance, and genuinely funny in a way that is rare for a character positioned as the most powerful being in his world. The Using Phone and Dancing pages in particular render him in the mundane-cool register that his fanbase gravitates toward – the strongest sorcerer alive, doing something completely ordinary with the same effortless confidence he brings to combat. These pages suit a lighter, more relaxed coloring approach than the battle pages, with the same canonical palette but without the dramatic energy effects.
The portrait pages – Satoru Gojo Anime, Satoru Gojo Color Sheet, Satoru Gojo Color Page, Satoru Gojo Image, Satoru Gojo Printable, Free Satoru Gojo, Free Satoru Gojo Color Page, Printable Satoru Gojo Sheet – provide clean standing or portrait compositions that work as flexible reference-style pages, suited to colorists who want to study his character design without the complexity of action or personality pose compositions.
The chibi and cute pages – Chibi Satoru Gojo, Cute Satoru Gojo – reimagine Gojo in the simplified, rounded proportions of chibi illustration style, which suits the playful dimension of his personality. The chibi pages are the most immediately accessible in the collection and the most shareable as finished pieces.
The ensemble page – Satoru Gojo and Other Characters – shows Gojo alongside other Jujutsu Kaisen characters, providing compositional variety and the visual contrast between his white hair and whatever character appears with him.
Coloring Tips for Satoru Gojo Pages
Gojo’s entire visual identity rests on three color elements: his white hair, his black uniform, and – when visible – his luminous teal-blue eyes. Getting all three right creates an immediately recognizable result; compromising any of them reduces the page to a generic character.
The white hair is the single most important element. It should be rendered in a genuinely bright white – not pale gray, not ivory, not cream, but white with cool blue undertones in the shadow areas. The specific quality of Gojo’s hair is that it reads as almost luminous – whiter than the page’s background, if possible, which in practical terms means keeping every shadow area in the cool blue-gray family rather than the warm gray-brown family. Warm shadows on white hair will make it read as blonde or dirty blonde from across the room; cool blue-gray shadows preserve the white reading at a distance. The hair falls in loose, natural-looking strands – it is not slicked back or formal, but it is also not wildly disheveled. Render the strand lines in a very light cool gray rather than in any darker tone.
His black uniform – the Jujutsu High teacher’s outfit – is the same deep, true black that appears across many anime combat characters’ designs. The challenge, as always with large black areas, is creating depth: use a slightly warm near-black for the deepest shadow areas, true black for the main body surfaces, and a slightly cooler dark gray where the fabric catches ambient reflected light. The collar and structure of the uniform give it formal, clean lines – render the edges and structural seams in sharp, clear strokes rather than soft blended edges to maintain the precision of the design.
His blindfold and sunglasses – he wears one or the other on nearly every page – are also black, but the fabric texture of the blindfold is different from the structured fabric of the uniform. The blindfold reads as slightly softer and more matte, with less reflected light and more even darkness. The sunglasses, when depicted, are the wraparound dark style that has become one of his most recognized fashion signatures – render them as very dark gray-black with a minimal hint of blue-gray reflection on the lenses.
His Six Eyes – when visible, which is more common in battle and power pages – are the most technically rewarding element in the entire collection. They are a luminous pale teal-cyan blue, almost like the color of tropical shallow water held up to light. The key to rendering them effectively is working in layers: start with a clean, pale sky blue as the base, then add a deeper teal in the pupil area and at the outer edges of the iris, and finally add a bright white highlight point in the upper section of each eye. If you have access to a white gel pen or white marker, a small white dot in each eye transforms the result dramatically – the highlight is what creates the “luminous” quality that defines the Six Eyes’ appearance.
For cursed technique effects, particularly on the battle pages: Blue technique manifests as a deep, saturated blue energy vortex or radiant point – think the specific blue of deep ocean or night sky, fully saturated rather than pale. Red technique is the inverse: a deep, warm crimson-red with slightly orange highlights at the most intense point. Hollow Purple – the combination of both – is rendered in the pages as a deep violet that sits between the blue and red of its component techniques, often with a bright white or near-white core where the two forces meet. If a page shows any of these effects, render the energy areas with the deepest color at the outer reaches and the brightest, most intense tone at the center source point.
His Domain Expansion: Unlimited Void, if depicted, is rendered in a deep cosmic purple-blue – think the color of deep space imagery, the dark purple-indigo of a nebula photograph. Any page showing the interior of his domain should be approached as a night-sky or deep-space coloring exercise: dark background with lighter purple-blue gradients and small white points of light or energy scattered throughout.
For the chibi pages, apply the canonical palette in the flat, even style appropriate to chibi illustration: pure white hair, black uniform, and if the eyes are visible, the clearest blue-teal you have. The simplified proportions of the chibi style make the white hair particularly impactful because it takes up a proportionally larger area of the composition than in the realistic pages.
5 Activities to Do With Your Satoru Gojo Pages
Color the three modes of Gojo. Print the Satoru Gojo Fighting page, a casual portrait page (such as Satoru Gojo Talking or Satoru Gojo Says Hi), and the Chibi Satoru Gojo page, and color all three as a triptych using his canonical palette throughout – but with dramatically different energy in the coloring treatment. The combat page should be bold, high-contrast, and include any technique effects at their most saturated intensity. The casual page should use the same base colors but in a softer, less dramatic application that suggests ease and confidence without urgency. The chibi page should be flat, clean, and bright. Mounted in a row, these three pages together tell the story of the character’s range – the same person in three different registers – through color treatment alone.
Study the Six Eyes as a color exercise. Print any page that shows Gojo’s eyes directly – the Satoru Gojo Anime, Satoru Gojo Fighting, or any portrait where the blindfold is absent – and spend deliberate time on just the eye area, building the teal-cyan from a pale base through deeper midtones to the pupil, then adding a bright white highlight. This focused practice on rendering luminous eyes in a specific color family is directly transferable to any other anime page where glowing or supernatural eyes are a key element. Gojo’s Six Eyes are one of the most specific color targets in anime illustration, and getting them right on a coloring page is a genuinely satisfying technical achievement.
Create a “Before and After” blindfold display. If you have a page showing Gojo with the blindfold and one showing his eyes directly (or can use the same page twice), color both versions of the same page: once with the blindfold as a solid, matte black across the eye area, and once with the Six Eyes rendered in full luminous teal-blue. Display them side by side with the blindfold version on the left and the eyes version on the right. The contrast between the two – same character, completely different visual impact – captures something essential about what makes the Six Eyes such an effective character design device: their power is amplified precisely because they are usually hidden.
Make a Hollow Purple technique study. Print the Satoru Gojo Fighting or Satoru Gojo Poster page and color it with particular attention to the cursed technique effects – rendering the Blue energy elements in deep saturated blue on one side of the composition and the Red energy elements in deep warm crimson on the other, with the Hollow Purple manifesting between them in deep violet. This three-color energy study in blue, red, and purple creates one of the most visually striking finished pages in any Jujutsu Kaisen collection, and it teaches the practical color theory of how complementary-adjacent colors read against dark backgrounds.
Design an Unlimited Void domain background. After coloring a Gojo portrait page, use a separate blank sheet of paper to design the interior of his Domain Expansion: Unlimited Void as a background that could be placed behind a cutout of the finished portrait. Start with a dark blue-purple background and build outward with lighter violet and indigo gradients, add small white or pale blue points of light, and create the sense of infinite, silent space that defines the domain’s aesthetic. Mount the colored Gojo cutout in the center of the finished domain background. This two-piece project combines portrait coloring with atmospheric environment design and produces a display piece that captures both the character and his signature technique in a single composition.
Download Your Free Satoru Gojo Pages Today!
All 20+ Satoru Gojo Coloring Pages are completely free – download as PDF to print or color online with one click. No sign-up, no cost. Whether you’re here as a Jujutsu Kaisen fan who has followed the series since Chapter 1, someone who found Gojo through the Season 2 anime, or simply a colorist who wants to work with one of the most visually distinctive character designs in contemporary anime, we hope this collection is exactly what you were looking for.
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