Among Us Coloring Pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com is one of the site’s largest single-game collections – 140+ free printable pages dedicated to Among Us, the social deduction game that became one of the most-played games in internet history. The collection spans the full creative range that Among Us‘ simple but expressive character design has inspired: core game scenes (impostor eliminations, vent escapes, body reports, sabotage), elaborate crossover tiles placing the game’s iconic crewmate figures in the visual identities of other beloved characters, seasonal holiday tiles, fantasy and mythical variants, space and cosmonaut themes, occupation and profession skins, and a massive anime crossover cluster pulling from One Piece and Naruto universes. The full Games collection is available through our Games Coloring Pages hub.
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About Among Us
Among Us is an online multiplayer social deduction game developed and published by InnerSloth, an independent American game studio. It was released in June 2018 for iOS and Android, with a PC version following shortly after, and a Nintendo Switch version in 2021.
The game’s premise is elegantly simple: a group of 4–15 players is crew members aboard a spaceship (or one of several other map settings). The majority of players are Crewmates, tasked with completing a series of maintenance tasks around the ship while trying to identify and vote out hidden traitors. A minority of players – typically 1–3 – are secretly Impostors, whose objective is to eliminate crewmates without being caught, sabotage the ship’s systems, and avoid being voted out during group discussions. Victory for crewmates requires either completing all their tasks or correctly identifying and ejecting all Impostors; victory for Impostors requires reducing the crewmate population enough that they can no longer maintain control.
The game was released to modest success in 2018 but remained relatively obscure for two years before experiencing an extraordinary viral explosion in late 2020. Driven by livestream culture – primarily major Twitch and YouTube content creators playing the game simultaneously – Among Us went from approximately 30,000 daily players to over 500 million monthly players within a matter of weeks in September–October 2020. It became one of the most-discussed cultural phenomena of 2020, generating an enormous volume of fan art, memes, merchandise, and creative content that made the crewmate figure one of the most recognizable characters in internet culture.
The crewmate’s visual design – a simple, rounded humanoid figure in a spacesuit, with a characteristic backpack and a single visor window for a face – is part of what made the game’s visual culture so generative. The design is minimal enough to invite customization and crossover: the crewmate is essentially a blank canvas in a spacesuit, which makes placing any other character’s visual identity onto the crewmate form both immediately recognizable and inherently funny.
Among Us is rated E10+ (Everyone 10 and older) by the ESRB for crude humor, fantasy violence, and online interaction. The core game mechanics – which involve players deceiving each other and impostors eliminating crewmates – are appropriate for ages 8 and up in context.
What’s in This Collection
Core Game Mechanics Tiles
The tiles depicting Among Us‘ actual gameplay moments form the collection’s most immediately recognizable cluster for fans of the game.
Impostor tiles cover the game’s central antagonist role across multiple scenarios: Impostor with Pistol and Knife and Imposter with Two Guns depict armed impostors; Impostor with Crewmate shows the impostor alongside its target in a moment of tense proximity; Impostor Vs Mini Crewmate places the impostor against the smaller mini crewmate companion introduced in later versions of the game; Impostor Eating Crewmate is the game’s most dramatically absurd depiction of elimination; and Dead Impostor shows the aftermath of a successful ejection vote.
Vent tiles – Jumping In Vent and In Vent Report – capture one of the game’s most mechanically defining moments: the act of using the ventilation system to move secretly around the map, which only Impostors can do. Being caught jumping into or emerging from a vent is one of the primary ways Impostors are identified and voted out in actual gameplay.
Body report – Go Ahead and Find the Traitor – depicts the crew discovery and reporting dynamic, the moment that triggers the game’s discussion and voting phase. Among Us Sabotage covers the Impostor’s secondary ability to compromise ship systems to cause chaos and create opportunities. Shhhhhhhh captures the social deception element – the gesture of keeping a secret, which is the emotional heart of the Impostor experience.
Among Us Dead, Among Us Dead Viking, Among Us Zombie, and Among Us Neck Snap extend the elimination theme into various stylized treatments. Among Us Fear captures the crewmate’s experience of uncertainty about who among the crew is trustworthy.
Anime Crossovers – One Piece Universe
The largest single crossover cluster in the collection draws from One Piece, the manga and anime series by Eiichiro Oda, depicting 10 characters in crewmate/impostor form. Each tile takes a specific One Piece character’s distinctive visual identity – costume, weapon, and characteristic design elements – and applies it to the Among Us crewmate silhouette.
Monkey D. Luffy Among Us places One Piece’s protagonist in crewmate form – Luffy’s straw hat placed on the crewmate’s round head, with his red vest and Gear appearance elements incorporated into the figure’s design.
Roronoa Zoro Among Us brings Zoro’s three-sword fighting style and bandana to the crewmate form. Usopp Among Us incorporates the sniper’s long nose and goggles. Vinsmoke Reiju Among Us depicts the Germa 66 commander in her pink spider-themed raid suit. Charlotte Katakuri Among Us brings the Big Mom Pirates’ Sweet Commander’s distinctive scarf and build. Yamato Among Us, Kozuki Oden Among Us, Coby Among Us, Fujitora Among Us, and Among Us Jinbei complete the One Piece roster across different design treatments.
For the full One Piece character collections, the site’s One Piece Coloring Pages hub provides standalone character tiles.
Anime Crossovers – Naruto Universe
A dedicated Naruto crossover cluster covers four characters: Naruto Among Us places the series’ protagonist’s characteristic orange jumpsuit and headband on the crewmate form. Kisame Among Us brings the Akatsuki shark-man’s blue skin and scaled sword. Among Us Sasuke incorporates Sasuke’s classic dark attire and Sharingan. Among Us Kakashi Manga Naruto depicts Kakashi with his characteristic silver hair, mask, and headband-covered eye.
Superhero Crossovers – Marvel and DC
A Marvel/DC crossover cluster applies some of comics’ most iconic visual identities to the crewmate silhouette. Iron Man Among Us gives the crewmate Tony Stark’s red and gold armor. Among Us Spiderman brings the red and blue web-patterned suit with signature eye lenses. Among Us Spiderman vs Venom is a duo tile, placing the classic hero-villain confrontation in crewmate form. Among Us Thor incorporates the Asgardian’s cape, winged helmet, and Mjolnir. Batman Among Us applies the Dark Knight’s cowl, cape, and bat symbol. Among Us Flash brings the red lightning-bolt suit. Ghost Rider Among Us gives the crewmate a flaming skull head – one of the collection’s most dramatic visual combinations. Among Us with Hand of Thanos equips the crewmate with the Infinity Gauntlet. Venom and Batman skins are a two-character tile. Batman, Flash, and Pikachu Among Us is the collection’s most compositionally varied superhero tile, mixing DC heroes with a Pokémon.
Video Game Crossovers
Mario Among Us and Among Us Mario place Nintendo’s most iconic character in crewmate form – the red cap, blue overalls, and mustache applied to the rounded spacesuit silhouette. Among Us, Bowser takes the Mario villain’s spiked shell, horns, and crown into crewmate territory. Among Us Sonic Holds a Knife positions the blue hedgehog as an impostor variant – Sonic’s speed-blur aesthetic combined with the crewmate’s shape and a menacing prop creates one of the collection’s most ironic compositions. Big Boss and his Dog and Nurse and Big Boss Among Us bring the Metal Gear Solid protagonist’s eyepatch, bandana, and tactical aesthetic to crewmate form, with accompanying dog companion.
Skibidi Toilet Kills Mini Among Us brings the internet’s Skibidi Toilet character – itself a product of the same internet culture ecosystem that made Among Us iconic – into direct collision with the game, in a crossover that requires familiarity with both meme universes to fully appreciate.
Among Us Yasuo references the League of Legends swordsman character, depicted in the crewmate silhouette with Yasuo’s characteristic flowing scarf and sword.
Princess and Fantasy Royalty
A dedicated royalty cluster covers princess and royal aesthetic treatments. Six Princesses Among Us is the collection’s most ambitious princess tile – six crewmates simultaneously styled in different princess visual identities. Among Us Skins Disney Princess applies multiple Disney princess aesthetics to the crewmate. Princess Among Us and Among Us Princess are individual princess-styled crewmate tiles. Jasmine Among Us specifically depicts the Aladdin character’s teal and gold outfit. Among Us King Hat applies a crown to the standard crewmate silhouette.
Fantasy and Mythical Variants
Unicorn Among Us and Unicorn Among Us with Wings transform the crewmate into a unicorn-themed figure with a horn and pastel rainbow elements – among the collection’s most colorful and kawaii-adjacent treatments. Among Us Unicorn and Fairy pairs a unicorn-styled crewmate with a fairy-winged variant. Among Us Fairy depicts the fairy wing variation independently. Among Us Wizard and Among Us Wizard in Different Poses apply wizard robes, a pointed hat, and a staff to the crewmate. Among Us Mage is a fantasy spellcaster variant.
Among Us Tiger and Among Us Fluffy Wolf apply full animal costumes – tiger stripes and wolf fur – to the crewmate silhouette. Among Us Fox and Among Us in Fox Costume bring fox ears, tail, and orange coloring. Among Us in Bear Costume wraps the crewmate in bear styling.
Cultural and Historical Costumes
Ninja Among Us applies the shinobi aesthetic – black clothing, headband, shuriken. Among Us Roman Soldier puts the crewmate in full Roman legionnaire armor with shield and gladius. Among Us Sombrero is a culturally festive variant of the Mexican wide-brimmed hat. Among Us Sheriff and Among Us Sheriff and little Spaceman apply American Old West lawman aesthetics – badge, hat, and holster. Interesting Headdress depicts an elaborate decorative headpiece.
Seasonal and Holiday Tiles
Among Us Halloween brings the game’s existing horror-adjacent aesthetic into explicit Halloween territory – pumpkins, haunted elements, or costume overlays appropriate to October. Thanksgiving Among Us applies autumn harvest imagery to the crewmate. Among Us Christmas tree and Among Us Christmas lights are the collection’s December tiles – a crewmate decorated as or alongside a Christmas tree, and another with string light decorations. Among Us New Year’s covers the winter holiday season transition. Among Us, with a wreath on its head, is a versatile seasonal decoration tile.
Space and Cosmonaut Tiles
Given that Among Us is fundamentally a space game – the original map takes place aboard a spaceship – the space and cosmonaut tiles bring the game back to its actual setting while expanding the context. Cosmonaut Among Us depicts a crewmate in full cosmonaut/astronaut gear distinct from the standard spacesuit. Cosmonaut and his Pet Owl adds an animal companion to the cosmonaut tile. Among Us Rocket places a crewmate with a rocket ship in an open space environment. Among Us with Flower in Space is the collection’s most quietly poetic tile – a crewmate floating in the void with a single flower, a composition that captures the gentle side of the game’s aesthetic.
Skin and Appearance Customization Tiles
Among Us’ in-game customization system allows players to choose colors, hats, visors, pets, and skins for their crewmates. A dedicated cluster reflects this customization culture. Among Us Skin Basketball Player and Among Us Skin Baseball Player apply sports uniforms. Among Us Skin Cute Girl and Among Us Skin Beautiful Hair are style-oriented variants. Among Us Skin Animal applies a full animal onesie aesthetic. Among Us in Cool Costume and Among Us in Beautiful Women’s Costume are style-forward costume variants.
Hair and accessory tiles cover the crewmate with expressive human hair styles that overlay the standard suit: Among Us with Flowing Hair, Among Us with a Stylish Hairstyle, and Among Us Curly Hair – all giving the otherwise faceless crewmate a more personalized human identity through hair styling.
Hat and accessory overlay tiles include Among Us with Smiling Hat, Among Us with Horns, Among Us with Mask, Among Us with Dinosaur (a dinosaur hat/costume overlay), Among Us with Rope, Among Us with Ornaments, Among Us with a Ball on Head, Among Us with a Heart, and Among Us With Unicorn Float (a pool float styled as a unicorn).
Activity and Social Tiles
Among Us Singing depicts a crewmate with a microphone in a musical performance pose. Among Us Listening Music shows a crewmate with headphones – an everyday activity that gives the otherwise purely game-context character a relatable slice-of-life quality. Among Us Cook depicts a crewmate in a chef’s apron with cooking equipment. Among Us Party is the collection’s most celebratory composition – crewmates in a party context with decorations.
Among Us Cute, Among Us Puppy, and Cute Koala Sitting on a Character are the collection’s most direct appeal-to-younger-children tiles – soft, rounded, affectionate compositions without any game-mechanics context. Among Us with A Pet Bird adds a companion animal.
Coloring Guide: The Among Us Palette
The Crewmate’s Base Design
The Among Us crewmate has one of the simplest designs in gaming – a rounded bean-shaped body with a backpack on the back, short legs, and a single reflective visor window on the front of the head. This simplicity is what makes the character so effective as a coloring subject: the entire body is essentially one large flat-color zone, with the visor as a secondary color element, and the backpack as a third.
The crewmate can be any color – the game offers 18 base colors (red, blue, green, purple, yellow, black, white, orange, brown, cyan, lime, maroon, rose, banana, coral, azure, and gray) plus additional colors added in updates. There is no canonical crewmate color – every player chooses their own – which means every page in this collection can legitimately be colored in any color the colorist prefers.
The visor is the most important secondary element. In the game, the visor is typically a reflective, slightly blue-tinted white-gray, suggesting a glass or plastic surface through which the character’s interior cannot be seen. Coloring the visor with a cool, slightly desaturated pale blue-gray, with a small white highlight in one corner, captures this reflective quality.
The backpack matches the crewmate’s body color, slightly differentiated in value – slightly darker in shadow areas where it attaches to the body.
Color Theory for the Crossover Tiles
The crossover tiles present a more complex coloring challenge than standard crewmate tiles: the colorist must simultaneously honor the Among Us crewmate’s characteristic silhouette and proportions while conveying the visual identity of the crossover character. The most effective approach is to prioritize the crossover character’s colors – the recognizable palette of the character being referenced – while keeping the crewmate silhouette’s structural elements (the visor, the backpack, the leg proportions) intact.
For the One Piece crossover tiles: Each One Piece character has a very specific canonical palette. Luffy’s straw hat uses warm tan-beige; his vest is vivid red. Zoro’s outfit uses dark greens and dark cloth tones with the three sword handles visible. Reiju uses bright pink with tactical suit detailing. Get the character’s most iconic color right first – the element that makes them immediately recognizable – and the rest of the coloring can follow.
For the superhero crossover tiles: Iron Man’s red and gold; Spider-Man’s red, blue, and black web pattern; Batman’s near-black with yellow bat symbol; Thor’s deep red cape and silver hammer – these are each single-decision colorings where one dominant color choice makes the character readable.
For multi-character tiles (Batman, Flash, and Pikachu; Six Princesses; Venom and Batman skins): Assign each character their canonical primary color before starting, and treat the composition as multiple independent coloring problems that need to maintain contrast against each other. Characters in adjacent positions should use different color families to prevent visual merging.
For general technique guidance applicable to these intricate crossover tiles, see our coloring tips for beginners guide on layering, blending, and working with multiple characters on a single page.
FAQs
What is Among Us? Among Us is a social deduction multiplayer game developed by InnerSloth, released in 2018. Players are either Crewmates (completing tasks while identifying hidden traitors) or Impostors (secretly eliminating crewmates and avoiding detection). It became a global cultural phenomenon in 2020 when its active player count grew from tens of thousands to hundreds of millions within weeks, driven by livestream and content creator culture.
Who are the crewmates and impostors? Crewmates are the majority of players – anonymous, identical-looking spacesuit figures whose only distinguishing characteristics are their color and cosmetic accessories. Impostors look identical to crewmates but have the ability to eliminate them, use vents, and sabotage ship systems. The social deception – convincing other players you are a crewmate when you are actually an impostor – is the game’s central mechanic.
What does “sus” mean in Among Us? “Sus” is short for “suspicious” – the most common word in Among Us players’ vocabulary, used to accuse other players of appearing to act like an impostor. “Red is sus” became one of 2020’s most widely used gaming phrases and entered mainstream internet slang.
Why is Among Us so popular? The game’s rise in 2020 was driven by its suitability for livestreaming – the social deception mechanics created natural dramatic tension that made it compelling to watch as well as play. Its free-to-play mobile availability meant extremely low barriers to entry. Its simple visual design made it easy to produce fan art, memes, and creative content. These factors combined to create one of gaming’s most remarkable organic viral growth moments.
What age group is this collection for? Among Us is rated E10+ for ages 10 and up. The coloring collection is suitable for approximately the same age range – most tiles are appropriate for ages 6 and up, while tiles depicting impostor violence scenarios (Impostor with Pistol and Knife, Impostor Eating Crewmate) are better suited to ages 8 and up who are familiar with the game’s context.
What are the Among Us maps? The original game ships with several maps – The Skeld (the original spaceship), MIRA HQ (a space station), Polus (a space colony), and The Airship (a large zeppelin). The collection’s space-themed tiles primarily reference The Skeld and general space-exploration aesthetics.
What are Among Us skins? Among Us’ in-game cosmetic system allows players to customize their crewmate with different colors, hats, visors, skins (outfit overlays), pets (small companion animals that follow you), and nameplates. Many tiles in this collection depict crewmates with specific hats, skin, and pet combinations – the “Among Us Skin” series specifically references this in-game customization culture.
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