Piratix Coloring Pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com brings together 20 free printable pages based on the collectible pirate toy franchise by Magicbox Int. – the Spanish toy company behind SuperThings and other popular mini-figure collectible lines. The collection covers the Piratix character universe across battle scenes, beach settings, captain figures, animal pirate characters, including a crocodile pirate and shark pirate, ensemble character compositions, and individual character portraits, including Captain Hermit – one of the franchise’s recognizable named captain figures. The full Cartoons collection is available through our Cartoons Coloring Pages hub.
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About Piratix
Piratix is a collectible mini-figure toy franchise produced by Magicbox Int., a Spanish toy company founded in 1994 and headquartered in Madrid. Magicbox is best known internationally for the SuperThings (also marketed as SuperZings) collectible superhero figure series, which became one of Europe’s most popular collectible toy lines among children ages 4–10. Piratix applies the same collectible mini-figure format to a pirate adventure theme, launching a dedicated universe of small pirate characters with distinct designs, rarity tiers, and thematic series.
The Piratix universe centers on animal-themed pirate characters – small figures combining specific animals with classic pirate aesthetics to create distinctive, immediately recognizable character designs. Each Piratix figure is a compact collectible with a specific character identity: a shark turned pirate, a crocodile in pirate attire, a skull-faced captain, a hermit crab commanding a crew. The animal-pirate hybrid concept gives each character a dual identity – the recognizable animal form and the layered pirate costume elements – that creates strong visual variety across the roster and gives children a clear framework for imagining each character’s personality and role within the Piratix world.
The franchise is organized into multiple themed series, each with its own color palette and character aesthetic. The Gold Skull series emphasizes the classic skull-and-crossbones pirate imagery with gold and black coloring. The Shark Treasure series features aquatic-themed characters – sharks, fish, and ocean creatures – in the pirate format. The Crazy Jungle series applies the pirate theme to jungle animals, expanding the roster beyond sea creatures into a broader animal kingdom. Crystal and Neon variant editions of existing characters provide special finishes that are considered rarer in the collectible tier system.
Each Piratix series features characters across standard rarity tiers – common, rare, special, and ultra-rare – following the same collectible escalation format that drives engagement with SuperThings and similar mini-figure lines. The rarity structure encourages continued collecting as children seek to complete a series or find the most elusive figures.
What’s in This Collection
The 20 pages span the key visual categories of the Piratix universe:
Captain figures are the most authoritative characters in the Piratix hierarchy – larger, more elaborately designed figures that lead pirate crews. The Captain of Piratix tile depicts a generic captain character in full pirate captain regalia: tricorn hat, captain’s coat, commanding pose. Captain Hermit of Piratix depicts one of the franchise’s specifically named captain characters – a hermit crab-themed captain, combining the hermit crab’s characteristic shell-carrying form with pirate captain visual elements, including a prominent shell as a natural fortress and crustacean claws as weapons.
Animal pirate characters make up the core of the collection. The Shark of Piratix tile features a shark character in pirate costume – one of the most popular recurring animal types in the Piratix design language, given the shark’s natural associations with the ocean and predatory intimidation. The Funny Crocodile of Piratix tile depicts a crocodile pirate character in a more humorous, expressive pose – crocodiles being another frequently featured animal type in the franchise’s jungle-meets-sea character roster.
Skull characters are a cornerstone of the Piratix aesthetic – the Skull Piratix tile covers the skull-themed pirate character type that anchors the Gold Skull series. These characters combine classic skull-and-crossbones iconography with pirate costume elements, creating the most stereotypically “pirate” visual in the collection.
Battle and action scenes appear in the Wars of Piratix and Piratix Fighting tiles – compositions showing multiple characters in conflict or confrontation, with weapons, battle stances, and the dynamic energy of sea combat. These are more complex compositionally than the single-character portrait pages.
Setting and lifestyle pages – Piratix on Beach, Piratix Playing, Piratix Game – place characters in environmental or activity contexts rather than pure portrait or battle compositions. The beach setting is particularly evocative of the Piratix world, grounding the fantasy pirate characters in a coastal environment that extends the coloring beyond just the character figure to include sand, water, sky, and treasure.
Ensemble and character roster pages – Characters of Piratix, Characters of Fun Piratix, Cartoon Piratix, Fun Cartoon Piratix – show multiple characters together, providing the most compositionally complex and most colorfully varied pages in the collection.
The Piratix Toys tile is distinctive within the collection – it depicts the physical toy figures themselves rather than the illustrated character interpretations, giving collectors a direct reference to the product’s actual visual presentation.
Coloring Guide: The Piratix Palette
Piratix’s visual world draws on the established color conventions of both pirate imagery and the specific animal types represented by each character, layered over the toy franchise’s bright, high-saturation plastic toy aesthetic.
The core pirate color palette applies to clothing, accessories, and environmental elements across the collection. Pirate coat and hat elements use deep navy blue, dark burgundy-red, or weathered black as the dominant fabric colors – the traditional colors of naval and pirate outfits from the Golden Age of Piracy visual tradition. Gold and brass – applied as warm, bright gold – appear on buttons, buckles, belt clasps, cannon details, and treasure elements throughout. Rope and rigging elements use warm tan/manila – the natural hemp rope color. Wooden elements (ships, barrels, planks) use warm medium brown with slightly darker grain markings.
The animal character colors provide the primary coloring identity of each specific character and should take priority in establishing each figure’s visual distinctiveness. The Shark of Piratix uses the typical blue-gray shark coloring – a medium cool gray-blue on the dorsal/upper surfaces, lighter gray-white on the belly – with pirate costume elements layered over this base. The Funny Crocodile uses dark olive-green for the scaly skin – a yellow-green bias rather than blue-green – with lighter yellow-green on the belly and throat. The Skull Piratix characters use a warm bone-white for the skull element with black eye socket details, giving the skull a slightly aged, natural look rather than pure white.
Captain characters receive the most elaborate color treatments: the captain’s coat in the deepest, richest color in the collection (deep burgundy, navy, or black), the tricorn hat typically in the same dark tone with a contrasting band or feather accent, gold epaulettes and button details, and a commanding pose that benefits from the most careful attention to value contrast between the light belly/shirt area and the dark coat.
The Gold Skull series palette is black and gold throughout – the character’s base body uses near-black as the dominant tone, with bright, warm gold for all decorative elements, skull markings, and accessories. Keeping the gold elements genuinely vivid – a bright, warm metallic gold rather than a dull yellow – is the key to capturing the premium visual quality that makes this series distinct within the Piratix range.
The Shark Treasure series uses oceanic blues and teals as the dominant palette – deeper ocean blue for the background and water elements, brighter aqua for shallower water areas, and the blue-gray shark character coloring as described above. Treasure elements in gold provide a warm color accent against this predominantly cool blue palette.
The Crazy Jungle series uses the full range of tropical animal colors – vivid greens, oranges, yellows, and reds reflecting the biodiversity of jungle animals applied to the pirate format. These pages are the most colorfully diverse in the collection and benefit from saturated, vivid color choices throughout.
Battle and action pages benefit from dynamic background choices: deep ocean blue, storm-gray sky, or the warm amber of a sunset at sea. The environmental background should use lower saturation than the character colors – keeping the background relatively muted allows the vivid character designs to read clearly in the foreground.
Treasure elements – gold coins, treasure chests, jewels – use the full jewelry-box palette: bright warm gold for coins and chest hardware, deep red for rubies, vivid blue for sapphires, and green for emeralds. Treasure is always the most saturated color element in any Piratix scene that includes it.
4 Creative Activities with Piratix Pages
Build a Piratix Crew Board
Color four or five individual character pages – Captain, Shark, Crocodile, Skull character, and any other – and cut out each figure. Arrange them on a large sheet of blue construction paper (representing the ocean) and glue them in position to create a visual “crew board” displaying your Piratix team. Add hand-drawn treasure islands, ships, or cannon effects around the characters to complete the scene.
DIY Pirate Flag
Color the Skull Piratix page in the classic black-and-white/gold skull palette, cut out the skull design, and glue it onto a black rectangle of paper or fabric to create a custom Jolly Roger flag. Attach to a dowel or stick and display as a room decoration or use as a prop during pirate-themed play.
Piratix Storybook
Color the Wars of Piratix, Piratix on Beach, Piratix Fighting, and Captain of Piratix pages in sequence – each as a scene in a short story. Add hand-written captions below each page describing what’s happening, then staple the pages together along the left edge to create a handmade Piratix adventure comic or storybook.
Treasure Map Activity
Use the Piratix on Beach page as a starting location and design a custom treasure map around it – draw dotted trails from the beach scene across additional sheets of paper, marking landmarks, dangers, and finally an X marking the treasure location. Age the paper by lightly brushing the edges with a damp tea bag for a worn, authentic treasure map effect.
FAQs
What is Piratix? Piratix is a collectible mini-figure toy franchise produced by Magicbox Int., the Spanish toy company also known for SuperThings. The line features small pirate-themed animal characters sold in blind bags and themed sets across multiple series, including Gold Skull, Shark Treasure, and Crazy Jungle.
Who makes Piratix toys? Piratix is made by Magicbox Int., a Spanish toy company founded in 1994 and headquartered in Madrid, Spain. Magicbox is one of Europe’s leading producers of collectible mini-figure toy lines.
What age is Piratix for? The Piratix toy line is primarily targeted at children ages 4–10, with the collectible format and character variety designed to appeal to the same age range as other mini-figure collectible toys. The coloring pages are suitable for this same age range and for adult fans of the franchise.
What are the different Piratix series? The main Piratix series includes the Gold Skull series, Shark Treasure series, Crazy Jungle series, and special edition Crystal and Neon variant series. Each series has its own color palette and character theme while following the same animal-pirate character format.
Who is Captain Hermit in Piratix? Captain Hermit is a captain-tier character in the Piratix universe based on a hermit crab – combining the hermit crab’s shell and claw anatomy with a pirate captain’s commanding role and visual accessories.
All 20 Piratix Coloring Pages are free – download as PDF or color online. Share your finished pages on Facebook and Pinterest.
