Astro Bot Coloring Pages bring the PlayStation 5’s most celebrated game of 2024 straight to your coloring table – and this collection of 30+ free pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com covers the full cast: Astro Bot himself, the villainous Nebulax, Penguin Bot, Dog Bot, Wako Tako, and the many themed Bot costumes that made this game’s visual world so instantly lovable. Whether you’re a PlayStation fan who played through every level or a parent looking for a creative activity your child will recognize from the gaming world, these pages are built for you.
Every page is completely free – download as PDF to print or color online in your browser. No sign-up, no cost.
What Is Astro Bot?
Astro Bot is a 3D platformer developed by Team Asobi and published by PlayStation Studios, released for PlayStation 5 in September 2024. It is the sequel – in spirit and in ambition – to Astro’s Playroom, the charming platform game that came pre-installed on every PS5 at launch. Where Astro’s Playroom was a love letter to PlayStation history tucked inside a tech demo, the 2024 Astro Bot is a full, standalone game built from the ground up as one of the most joyful and polished platformers in years.
The game won Game of the Year at The Game Awards 2024 – one of the most competitive years in recent gaming history – beating out major releases across all platforms. It was a genuine surprise to many in the industry, and it cemented Team Asobi as one of the most exciting studios in PlayStation’s portfolio.
The story follows Astro Bot, a small robot in a blue spacesuit, who must travel across a galaxy of planets to rescue his Bot friends after their spaceship is destroyed by the game’s villain. The gameplay is built around the unique capabilities of the PlayStation 5’s DualSense controller – haptic feedback, adaptive triggers, and motion controls are all woven into the planet exploration in ways that make the game feel genuinely different depending on what ability Astro is using at any given moment. You can explore more of the gaming world through our Games Coloring Pages hub if you want other game character collections alongside this one.
Meet the Characters
Astro Bot is the series’ protagonist – a small, round-headed robot in a blue and white spacesuit with a visor that reflects light and large, expressive eyes visible through the helmet. His design is deliberately simple and immediately readable: the round helmet, the compact body, the stumpy limbs. His canonical palette is white for the suit body, blue for the helmet and accents, with a gold or yellow visor reflection. He is one of those character designs that reads as friendly from every angle and at any size, which makes him excellent for coloring at all skill levels.
Nebulax is the main villain – a large, dark, tentacled space creature with a menacing presence that contrasts sharply with Astro Bot’s cheerful design. His palette is deep purples and blacks with bioluminescent teal or electric purple glowing accents – the classic “space villain” color language of dark voids and cold light. The Nebulax in Astro Bot and Scary Nebulax and Cute Astro Bot pages show this villain-protagonist contrast at its most visually striking, with the darkness of Nebulax directly juxtaposed against Astro Bot’s brightness.
Penguin Bot appears in the Astro Bot and Penguin Bot page – a bot in a penguin costume with the distinctive black-and-white penguin markings layered over the standard bot body. His pages work well as a simple two-color exercise with the penguin pattern doing most of the visual work.
Dog Bot appears in two pages – Astro Bot and Dog Bot, and Big Dog Bot and Astro Bot. He wears a dog costume over the standard bot form, with warm brown and tan tones for the dog suit against the white and blue of the bot underneath.
Wako Tako is the octopus-themed bot – appearing in the Astro Bot and Wako Tako page with the rounded tentacled aesthetic of an octopus suit in warm pinks and reds over the bot’s body.
Flowers Bot appears in the Astro Bot and Flowers Bot page – a bot with a flower-themed costume in the vivid greens and bright floral colors typical of the game’s nature-themed planet designs.
The themed costume bots – Mouse Astro Bot, Laborer Astro Bot, Rapper Astro Bot – show Astro Bot in different costume variants: the Mouse page has the soft gray of a mouse suit with round ears; the Laborer page has the orange and yellow of a construction worker outfit; the Rapper page has the bold, stylized streetwear aesthetic of hip-hop fashion rendered in bot scale.
What’s Inside the Astro Bot Coloring Collection
The solo Astro Bot portrait pages – Fun Astro Bot, Free Astro Bot, Simple Astro Bot for Kids, Astro Bot Playing, Astro Bot Jumping, Astro Bot Dancing, Astro Bot Game, Astro Bot of Game – form the core of the collection. These range from very simple, open outlines like Simple Astro Bot for Kids (ideal for young children or anyone new to the game’s aesthetic) to more dynamic action poses like Astro Bot Jumping and Astro Bot Playing that capture the game’s energetic platformer spirit.
The villain pages – Nebulax in Astro Bot, Scary Nebulax and Cute Astro Bot, Big Astro Bot, Nebulax and Dog Bot – are the most dramatic in the collection. The contrast between Astro Bot’s small, round, bright design and Nebulax’s large, dark, menacing form creates a natural visual tension in these pages that makes them particularly interesting to color with strong contrast in mind.
The companion and costume pages – Astro Bot and Penguin Bot, Astro Bot and Wako Tako, Astro Bot and Dog Bot, Big Dog Bot and Astro Bot, Astro Bot and Flowers Bot, Mouse Astro Bot, Laborer Astro Bot, Rapper Astro Bot – cover the themed costume variety that is one of the game’s most charming visual elements. Each costume bot requires a different primary color palette layered over the standard white-and-blue bot design, which makes these pages useful practice in color layering.
The symbol page – Astro Bot Symbol – is the most graphic and design-focused page in the collection, featuring the game’s visual identity rather than a character pose. This works particularly well as a display piece after coloring.
Coloring Tips for Astro Bot Pages
Astro Bot’s core palette is built around three colors that need to stay consistent across every page: white for the suit body, medium blue for the helmet and accent pieces, and a warm gold or amber for the visor. Getting these three right is the whole foundation. The white should stay clean and bright – heavy coloring pressure or too much layering will muddy it. The blue should be a mid-range blue with some warmth to it (not cold or dark), and the gold of the visor is the one spot where you can let the color be richly saturated.
The robot surfaces in Astro Bot’s design have a slight sheen – the smooth, slightly reflective quality of a plastic or metal spacesuit. You can suggest this with highlights: leave a small white area on the curved top of the helmet, and a slightly lighter blue along the uppermost edge of any blue surface. These two highlights together make the character read as three-dimensional rather than flat.
For Nebulax, commit fully to the darkness. His palette should be as deep as your darkest purple or blue-black – near-black at the core of his body, transitioning to a rich dark purple at the edges, with the bioluminescent glow effects in electric teal or cold purple rendered in your brightest, most saturated versions of those colors. The glow should be the lightest color on the page – white at the core, transitioning quickly outward to the vivid teal. The contrast between Nebulax’s near-black and these bright glow colors is exactly what makes him visually intimidating.
For the costume pages – Penguin Bot, Dog Bot, Mouse Bot – think of the costume as a layer sitting on top of the bot. The costume color goes on first as the dominant element, and then you’re looking for the places where the underlying bot suit shows through (usually the gloves, feet, and visor areas) and returning to the white and blue there. This layering approach keeps the costume feeling like a costume rather than a complete repaint.
For the group pages – Scary Nebulax and Cute Astro Bot, Big Astro Bot, Nebulax and Dog Bot – use the Astro Bot character as your lightest, brightest area, and let everything around him be progressively darker. In the game’s visual language, Astro Bot is always the source of warmth and light in a scene, and the backgrounds and villains work in darker registers around him. Following this logic in your coloring will make these pages feel most connected to the game.
5 Activities to Do With Your Astro Bot Pages
Build a planet diorama. Color three or four pages from different parts of the collection – a solo Astro Bot portrait, a costume bot, and a villain page – then cut them out and mount them against a large sheet of dark blue or black paper you’ve decorated with stars and planet shapes. Arrange Astro Bot as the foreground figure, the villain page at the back, and the costume bot mid-scene. This captures the game’s structure of a small hero navigating a large, colorful, sometimes dangerous galaxy.
Color Astro Bot’s costume evolution. Print one plain Astro Bot portrait page and the Mouse, Laborer, Rapper, Penguin, and Dog costume pages. Color the plain page first in the canonical white-and-blue palette to establish the base character. Then color each costume page in the appropriate costume colors while keeping the underlying bot elements (visor, gloves, feet) in the same white-and-blue as the base. Arranged together, these six pages show the same character in six different visual registers – exactly how costume design works in game development.
Make a villain-versus-hero contrast study. Print the Scary Nebulax and Cute Astro Bot page and color it twice: once with a bright, warm palette for the scene (Astro Bot vivid and saturated, background warm), and once with a cold palette (Astro Bot muted and slightly desaturated, background dark and cold). Compare the two finished versions. The same page with two different palette approaches tells two completely different emotional stories about the same confrontation.
Create an Astro Bot birthday card. Print the Astro Bot Dancing or Astro Bot Playing page and color it carefully in the canonical palette. Cut it out and mount it on the front of a folded card. Inside, write a message referencing the game – something about rescuing friends and going on adventures – for a genuinely personal card for any PlayStation fan in your life. The simple, round, cheerful design of Astro Bot transfers beautifully to a greeting card format.
Design your own Bot costume. After coloring the existing costume pages, draw your own Astro Bot on blank paper using the game’s design logic: a round helmet, compact body, stumpy limbs, and a visor. Then design a costume for your bot based on a theme of your choice – a chef, a firefighter, a deep-sea diver, an astronomer – and color it in the costume colors while keeping the visor and underlying suit elements in white and blue. This exercise in fan character design is one of the most rewarding follow-up activities in any game-based coloring collection.
Download Your Free Astro Bot Pages Today!
All 20+ Astro Bot Coloring Pages are completely free – download as PDF to print or color online with one click. No sign-up, no cost. Whether you played Astro Bot on PS5 and want to spend more time in that world, or you’re here because your child loves the character, we hope this collection captures something of what makes this game so special.
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