Colour Me Brutal: Irisy Aqua Paints a Vivid Battle Royale in 3-Minute Bursts

In the shimmering sea of Eden, where memories manifest as colour and fate is painted in fleeting hues, Irisy Aqua plunges players into a kaleidoscopic clash of strategy and speed. This in-depth exploration of its vibrant mechanics reveals a battle royale unlike any other, where every match is a three-minute burst of tower destruction, deck-building, and real-time colour evolution. With seven girls wielding chromatic power and a world that pulses with poetic melancholy, Irisy Aqua invites you to fight, customise, and transform in a realm where every shade tells a story.

Phase screen in Irisy Aqua showing three bright neon ability cards players choose from between game stages.

Irisy Aqua Review Pros:

  • Big, beautiful graphics. 
  • 873MB download size. 
  • Game settings – camera speed slider, Invert camera, and ADV auto-play speed. 
  • System settings – graphics option is low or high. 
  • Season-based leaderboards for the current and show the previous one. 
  • Seven playable characters each have unique stats for HP, move, and skill. 
  • Customise your character by selecting ability cards for each phase within the game. 
  • Game match options – room match, local match, and offline play. 
  • Moba gameplay. 
  • Earn rewards from playing the game, and you get notified at the end of a match. 
  • 3D game board, and you can move the camera around slightly; the board area is circular. 
  • Scenario is a story mode. 
  • Character interactions are portraits and text; you can set it to skip, auto scroll or click through. 
  • The menus are bright and colourful with neon outlines, it’s eye-catching, that’s for sure. 
  • Characters are voiced. 
  • In scenario mode, you can replay missions. 
  • RGB is the key to the game. Red, Green and Blue, standing in a blue area makes the blue attack stronger, etc. 
  • Three phases within a game, and at each new phase, you pick from one of three random cards/abilities. 
  • Health bibles show and standing in them will heal you, but won’t increase your attacks. 
  • Getting hit has you dropping colour crystals that make that colour attack weaker. 
  • Attacks show the area or direction of attacks before you cast them. 
  • In-game, there will be bugs, towers, and a central white tower. You need to take out the towers before the centre one. 
  • Destroying a tower will drop coloured crystals that, in turn, will empower them. 
  • Attacking characters will cause them to lose the power of their attacks. 
  • The scenario has two difficulties, and you can jump between them because of the flow chart-style layout of the missions. 
  • Handy zoom out and recentre camera buttons. 
  • Button prompts show on attacks and picking a car/ability. 

Phase screen in Irisy Aqua showing three bright neon ability cards players choose from between game stages.

Irisy Aqua Review Cons:

  • The game breaks the tutorial up over many missions, and it’s not well done. You don’t get a lot of information, and the missions don’t follow on to each other, meaning you could do a tutorial, then nothing, then a tutorial. 
  • You cannot remap the controls. 
  • No central manual or help section. 
  • All the characters look the same, but just a different colour. 
  • It’s a game that is really tough to get into. 
  • The story is something I quickly forgot about and just clicked through. 
  • New players will have to take time out to learn the card/a ilities as there is a lot and you have a really short timer to select a card in between phases. 
  • So many missions in the scenario mode are just conversations and card/ability unlock rewards. 
  • The knockdown is huge and frustrating; you have to wait too long to regain yourself. 
  • I never felt like I understood what was going on; the game never helped. 
  • The card/abilities are fun, but again, you have to put work in to know which one to pick each phase. 
  • It feels like I’m trying to learn a game with people who are already the best in the world. 

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Turquoise character in Irisy Aqua faces in-game punishment as a dramatic overlay cuts across an active battlefield below.

Irisy Aqua:

Official Website:

Developer: Otorakobo

Publisher: Otorakobo

Store Link:

Nintendo

Irisy Aqua Review

Jim Smale

Graphics
70%
Sound
70%
Accessibility
60%
Length
70%
Fun Factor
70%

Summary

Irisy Aqua – The Thrills and Highlights of Gameplay
Irisy Aqua throws players into three-minute bursts of strategic chaos, blending MOBA-style battles with fast-paced colour manipulation across a 3D circular game board. Each match demands real-time decision-making with ability cards selected at every phase, where RGB zones boost respective attack strengths. Seven chromatic heroines bring varied stats and skill sets, and every clash sees towers fall, crystals drop, and attacks evolve. With bugs, boss towers, and a central white objective, the map offers layered goals, making each match feel like a vibrant sprint through tactical terrain.

Irisy Aqua – Where It Falls Short: Key Negatives
Despite its colourful promise, Irisy Aqua stumbles in onboarding. The tutorial system is fragmented and inconsistent, making it tough for newcomers to grasp mechanics. Controls can’t be remapped, there’s no centralised help manual, and the learning curve feels steep, especially with time-limited card choices each phase. Character visuals lack variation beyond palette swaps, and scenario missions often reduce to dialogue and card unlocks. The knockdown mechanic drags matches, and overall, the game leaves players guessing far too often.

Irisy Aqua – Immersive Story and Narrative Elements
Story mode (Scenario) is a poetic dive into memory, fate, and colour, but it struggles to maintain player interest. Missions are charted flow-style, allowing difficulty switches and replays, yet most plot beats are buried in text boxes and forgettable exchanges. Character interactions are voiced, but primarily static, offering portraits and text with auto-scroll or skip options. Ultimately, the narrative feels secondary to the gameplay loop and lacks emotional punch.

Irisy Aqua – Visual and Performance Aspects
Visually, Irisy Aqua is a stunner. Menus glow with neon outlines, boards shimmer with colour-coded zones, and characters, while similarly designed, pop against the vibrant backdrop. With adjustable camera speed, zoom tools, and simple graphics toggles, the game runs smoothly across its compact 873MB footprint. The UI is clean and intuitive, and button prompts help guide the chaos, but the polish doesn’t fully offset gameplay frustrations.

Irisy Aqua – Overall Verdict: Is It Worth Playing?
Irisy Aqua is a bold concept brimming with style, urgency, and chromatic flair. Its rapid-fire gameplay and layered mechanics reward strategic minds willing to climb its learning wall. But inconsistent tutorials and a lack of onboarding may alienate curious newcomers. For those drawn to fast, colourful battles and MOBA experimentation, there’s a vivid core worth unlocking, just expect to put in the effort before it all clicks.

Back of the Box Quotes:
“Three-minute chaos, infinite colour, welcome to Irisy Aqua.”

68%

Jim Smale

Gaming since the Atari 2600, I enjoy the weirdness in games counting Densha De Go and RC De Go as my favourite titles of all time. I prefer gaming of old where buying games from a shop was a thing, Being social in person was a thing. Join me as I attempt to adapt to this new digital age!

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