App Feature
Squishy Magic: 3D Toy Coloring lets you design, paint, and play with lifelike 3D squishy toys. Pick from numerous shapes, colors, and textures, rotate while coloring, then squeeze and stretch your creations with realistic physics and ASMR sounds. It includes a large and growing catalog of toys, daily unlocks, and optional offline play.
Verdict
Verdict: A delightful, tactile 3D coloring and anti-stress app with great variety, tempered by ads and some paywalled items.
Who is it for
Best for:
- Kids and adults seeking relaxing, tactile ASMR-style creativity
- Casual artists who enjoy decorating 3D objects with lots of colors/textures
- Offline play moments (travel, no Wi‑Fi) to avoid ads
Not ideal for:
- Users who dislike ads or gated content, even with offline mode
- Power creators wanting freehand painting, layers, or pro-grade editing tools
- Those expecting complex progression, levels, or deep gameplay systems
Real-world User Experience
Users like it:
Highly satisfying squish physics and ASMR sounds; cute, expansive toy library; broad color/pattern palettes (glitter, metallic, pastels, etc.); ability to name and collect creations; runs smoothly offline with far fewer ads; low-cost Plus option; frequent updates and unlocks keep content fresh.
Users complain about:
Ads can feel frequent online; some colors/toys locked behind IAP or rewarded ads; occasional gating of basic colors (e.g., brown) is annoying; squish feel can seem a bit 'watery' to some; sharing requires the recipient to have the app; requests for more advanced coloring tools and difficulty levels.
Is it Worth Paying For?
The base app is generous and fully usable, especially offline to avoid most ads. The optional Plus/IAP is low-cost (reported ~$0.99) and good value if you want more palettes, toys, and fewer interruptions. If you’re sensitive to ads or want faster access to content, the small purchase is worthwhile; otherwise, staying free is perfectly fine.
How it Compares to Alternatives
Compared to standard coloring book apps, Squishy Magic is more interactive thanks to real-time 3D models and physics. Versus slime simulators (including Dramaton’s own Super Slime Simulator), it focuses on decorating objects rather than fluid play, offering a stronger sense of collection and customization. It lacks the precision tools of drawing apps but surpasses many anti-stress sims in variety, polish, and tactile feedback.
Summary
Squishy Magic: 3D Toy Coloring excels as a calming creative outlet: you pick from a wide array of cute 3D toys, apply rich palettes and textures, then enjoy convincingly squishy ASMR play. With a 4.6 rating and 10M+ downloads, it delivers polished visuals, satisfying physics, and steady content updates. Ads and some gated items are the main trade-offs, but offline play mitigates this, and the inexpensive Plus tier offers fair value. If you want a soothing, hands-on creative app that blends coloring with tactile fidget fun, this is an easy recommendation.











