Free Shadowverse Coloring Pages: 15+ printable PDF pages featuring Hiro Ryugasaki, Mimori Amamiya, Shindou Kazuki, Kai Ijuin, and Alice Kurobane from the Shadowverse anime, including solo portraits, duo pages, and general series pages. All free, download PDF to print, or color online.
Shadowverse is a card game anime, which means each character carries a double identity: a high school student in a school uniform and a competitive player whose personality and ambition are expressed through the fantasy cards they play. The standard school uniform grounds each character in their everyday world, while their expression, posture, and the intensity they bring to any competitive moment hint at the fantasy forces their deck commands. Coloring these pages means holding both layers at once: the grounded human figure and the latent power the face and body suggest.
The pages are divided into two types. Solo portrait pages, Hiro from Shadowverse, Mimori in Shadowverse, Kai solo, Alice solo, Shindou Kazuki, read the character’s personality through their expression and posture as much as through their palette. Duo and scene pages, Hiro with Kai, Hiro with Luca, Mimori with Alice, Mimori with Kazuki, shift the focus to the dynamic and relationship: the tension or camaraderie between players in the same frame. General series pages suit younger fans; the detailed character and duo pages give older fans more to work through.
These pages work well at home or as anime fan art. These are fan-made coloring pages and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by the creators or rights holders of Shadowverse.
Quick Answer
Shadowverse coloring pages are a free set of 15+ printable PDFs and online coloring sheets featuring Hiro Ryugasaki, Mimori Amamiya, Shindou Kazuki, Kai Ijuin, and Alice Kurobane from the Shadowverse anime across solo portraits, duo pages, and general series pages. The card game anime visual identity, grounded in school uniform, combined with competitive intensity, is the set’s defining design challenge.
Best for: Shadowverse fans, card game anime fans, digital card game fans, teens and adults, and anyone who enjoys competitive anime character coloring
Formats: printable PDF and online coloring
Popular pages: Hiro Ryugasaki from Shadowverse, Mimori Amamiya from Shadowverse, Hiro Ryugasaki and Kai Ijuin, Alice Kurobane from Shadowverse
Creative uses: fan art practice, competitive expression study, duo dynamic coloring, Shadowverse cast display, and card game anime character comparison
What’s Inside Shadowverse Coloring Pages
Hiro Ryugasaki Pages
Hiro Ryugasaki, the series protagonist, appears in three pages: Hiro Ryugasaki from Shadowverse, Hiro Ryugasaki and Luca Yonazuki, and Hiro Ryugasaki and Kai Ijuin.
Coloring Hiro: Hiro has dark brown hair, warm skin, and the determined, forward-focused expression of a shonen protagonist. His school uniform is the visual anchor common to most characters in the set. On his solo page, his expression carries the energy of someone who plays every card game with their whole self: keep the eyes bright and the expression open. On duo pages with Kai and Luca, the dynamic between the figures is the focus: Hiro reads as the warmer, more emotionally open player of any pairing he appears in.
Mimori Amamiya Pages
Mimori Amamiya appears in four pages: Mimori Amamiya, Mimori Amamiya in Shadowverse, Mimori Amamiya from Shadowverse, and Mimori Amamiya and Alice Kurobane, plus the duo page with Kazuki.
Coloring Mimori: Mimori has light-colored hair and a more composed, elegant bearing than Hiro. Her expression sits in a cooler, more self-possessed register. On her solo pages, the combination of the school uniform and her composed expression creates the visual layering specific to card game anime: the ordinary student uniform and the face of someone who has thought carefully about how to win. On the duo page with Alice, the two characters’ palettes and expressions play off each other.
Shindou Kazuki and Kai Ijuin Pages
Shindou Kazuki appears in two pages: Shindou Kazuki from Shadowverse and the duo page with Mimori. Kai Ijuin appears in three pages: Kai Ijuin, Kai Ijuin from Shadowverse, and the duo page with Hiro.
Coloring Kazuki and Kai: both Kazuki and Kai carry the cooler, more controlled expression that defines rival or challenge-type characters in competitive anime. Their palettes tend toward more contained, slightly darker tones compared to the warmer protagonist palette. On the Hiro and Kai duo page, the contrast between Hiro’s warm open expression and Kai’s controlled cool reads as the competitive dynamic between them in palette and expression before any action takes place.
Alice Kurobane Pages
Alice Kurobane appears in three pages: Alice Kurobane, Alice Kurobane from Shadowverse, and the duo page with Mimori.
Coloring Alice: Alice has a distinctive design that sets her apart from the more standardly uniformed characters. Her palette and expression suggest a character with a strong individual visual identity within the group. On the duo page with Mimori, the two characters’ contrasting expressions and palettes create the visual dynamic of two players sizing each other up.
General and Printable Shadowverse Pages
Three pages cover the series broadly: Shadowverse, Shadowverse Anime, and Anime Shadowverse. These may show a character in a more dynamic or fantasy-inflected pose, a group composition, or a scene representative of the series’ competitive energy.
Coloring the general pages: approach these with the same school-uniform base and intensity-of-competition expression as the character pages. If any background element suggests the card game’s fantasy aesthetic, use the vivid, saturated tones of fantasy illustration: deep purples, electric blues, or rich golds that read as the power underlying the ordinary school setting.
Printable PDF and Online Shadowverse Coloring Pages
Every design comes in two ways: a printable PDF for paper, or the same artwork colored on screen.
Using both formats: print the PDF when you want a clean sheet for fine-liners, colored pencils, or markers, and use the on-screen version when there is no printer nearby. The PDF holds the series’ expressive character linework and competitive expression detail cleanly on standard letter or A4 paper.
What These Pages Do
Shadowverse belongs to a specific anime genre where the character design has to do two things at once: make the player look like an ordinary person and simultaneously communicate the scale of the power they command through their cards. The school uniform is the ordinary-person layer, and the expression, posture, and intensity are the power layer. Working through these pages means balancing both layers: keeping the uniform accurate to establish the everyday world, and giving the expression enough intensity to suggest a player operating far above what a school setting would normally contain. That combination, ordinary visual anchor plus concentrated competitive intensity, is a design logic shared across card game anime, and understanding it through Shadowverse builds a vocabulary for any character in the genre. From here, anime coloring pages are the parent hub, and Yu-Gi-Oh coloring pages and Digimon coloring pages are the closest thematic parallels.
The American Art Therapy Association recognizes that creative engagement with game-based imagery, including the visual languages that competitive games develop, offers a form of imaginative play with genuine recreational value distinct from passive entertainment. Card game anime characters carry the particular quality of representing real strategic thinking made visible in a face, a posture, and coloring them asks the colorist to engage with that strategic expressiveness as a creative challenge. The American Academy of Pediatrics supports imaginative, game-adjacent creative activity as a healthy part of development, and the Shadowverse pages provide a focused, screen-free creative context for fans who engage deeply with the competitive and strategic dimensions of the series.
How to Color Shadowverse Coloring Pages
These steps work for any page in the set, from a solo character portrait to the duo dynamic pages.
On every page, identify whether the character is in their everyday or competitive mode. Standard portrait pages often show the character in a composed, forward-focused expression that reads as competitive readiness. If a page shows a more relaxed moment, keep the expression and palette slightly warmer and less intense. The shift in emotional register is what distinguishes a character portrait from a competitive scene.
Keep the school uniform colors consistent across all characters. The uniform is the visual anchor that connects all the characters in the set. Using a consistent dark navy or dark grey for the blazer across all pages helps the set read as a cohesive cast even when individual hair and skin tones vary considerably.
On duo pages, use expression contrast to communicate the relationship. Hiro and Kai as rivals: keep Hiro warm and open, Kai cool and controlled. Mimori and Alice: read the composition to understand whether they are allies or opponents in the scene, and calibrate the warmth of each face accordingly.
For any background fantasy element, use vivid saturated tones. If a background or surrounding element suggests the card game’s fantasy world, rich purples, deep blues, or golden-amber tones read as the latent power in the game. The contrast between these vivid background tones and the ordinary school-uniform figures is the visual language of card game anime.
On group and general pages, place each character’s hair color before any other element. The hair is the primary identifier for each character once the uniform establishes the shared visual base. Assign Hiro’s dark brown, Mimori’s light tone, Kai’s distinct style, and Alice’s individual palette before filling any other area.
5 Creative Craft Ideas with Shadowverse Coloring Pages
Hiro and Kai Rival Dynamic
Color the Hiro Ryugasaki and Kai Ijuin page, keeping Hiro in a warm, open palette and Kai in a cooler, more controlled register.
Mount on dark card with the caption “Shadowverse Rivals” for a competitive pair display that takes about twenty-five minutes.
Mimori and Alice Duo Display
Color the Mimori Amamiya and Alice Kurobane page, reading each character’s expression to determine which palette register suits them in that composition.
Mount on a card as a character duo display that takes about twenty minutes.
Solo Character Expression Study
Color the Hiro Ryugasaki from Shadowverse page and the Kai Ijuin from Shadowverse page using contrasting emotional registers: warm open intensity for Hiro and cool concentrated control for Kai.
Mount both side by side on a card to show how the same school-uniform base carries two different competitive expressions. Takes about twenty-five minutes.
Shadowverse Cast Display
Color one page each for Hiro, Mimori, Kai, and Alice in their individual palettes.
Cut all four to the same height and mount in a row on dark card with the series title above for a four-character cast display that takes about thirty-five minutes.
Fantasy Background Card
Color a general Shadowverse or Shadowverse Anime page, giving any background or atmospheric elements vivid fantasy tones: deep purple, electric blue, or rich gold against the everyday school palette of the figures.
Mount as a standalone display that shows the card game world visible behind the students. Takes about twenty minutes.
FAQ About Shadowverse Coloring Pages
Are these Shadowverse coloring pages free, and can I color them online?
Yes. Every page is free, with no account, email, or payment required. Download the PDF to print at home, or color the design on screen in the browser.
Which characters are included?
The set features Hiro Ryugasaki, Mimori Amamiya, Shindou Kazuki, Kai Ijuin, and Alice Kurobane across solo portraits, duo pages, and general series pages.
What is Shadowverse?
Shadowverse is a digital card game developed by Cygames, released in 2016, with an anime adaptation, Shadowverse: Champion’s Battle, broadcast from 2020 to 2021. The anime follows high school students who compete in Shadowverse card game tournaments, with each player’s deck and strategy reflecting their personality and determination. You can read more about Shadowverse on Wikipedia.
What colors should I use for Hiro Ryugasaki?
Hiro has dark brown hair, warm skin, and an open, determined expression. His school uniform is a dark navy blazer. Keep his palette on the warmer side compared to the rival characters: warm brown hair, warm skin, and an expression that reads as genuinely engaged rather than strategically controlled.
What makes card game anime character design distinctive?
Card game anime characters carry two visual layers: the ordinary school uniform that grounds them in everyday life, and the competitive expression and posture that suggests the power they command through their cards. Coloring these pages means holding both layers at once, keeping the uniform accurate while giving the expression enough intensity to hint at the strategic depth the character brings to every game.
How do I color the duo pages?
Identify the relationship between the two characters in each duo page: rivals read with contrasting warm and cool palettes, allies read with complementary or similar registers. On the Hiro and Kai page, keep Hiro warm and Kai cool. On the Mimori and Alice page, read the expressions to calibrate whether the scene is competitive or collaborative.
Are the pages suitable for younger fans?
Yes. The general Shadowverse and Shadowverse Anime pages and the simpler solo portraits suit younger fans well. The detailed duo dynamic pages and the competitive expression study are better suited to older fans.
What is Shindou Kazuki’s role in Shadowverse?
Shindou Kazuki is one of the rival characters in the Shadowverse anime, a skilled and competitive player whose personality is reflected in his more composed, controlled expression compared to the warmer, more open protagonist Hiro. On the duo page with Mimori, his expression and bearing communicate his character before any dialogue.
Are these official Shadowverse coloring pages?
No. They are fan-made coloring sheets created by fans for personal use and are not affiliated with, licensed by, or endorsed by the creators or rights holders of Shadowverse.
What crafts can I make with these pages?
Popular options include a Hiro and Kai rival dynamic, a Mimori and Alice duo display, a solo character expression study, a Shadowverse cast display, and a fantasy background card.
More Card Game Anime and Anime Coloring Pages
Browse the full set at ColoringPagesOnly.com, then open any design to print it or color it on screen.
These pages are made for personal fan use. They are fan-made coloring designs and are not official products of the Shadowverse franchise.
For the final pass: keep the school uniform consistent across all characters as the shared visual anchor, use contrasting warm and cool expressions on duo rival pages, and for any fantasy background element, reach for vivid purples, blues, and golds that suggest the power behind the ordinary school setting. Those three habits cover the most important coloring decisions in the set.
Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We would love to see your rival pairs, cast displays, and fantasy background cards.
