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Home Technology

How good is YOUR colour perception? Deceptively difficult test tasks you with finding the boundary between two shades – so, how far can you get?

by LJ News Opinions
March 28, 2026
in Technology
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By SHIVALI BEST, SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY EDITOR

Published: 08:56 EDT, 27 March 2026 | Updated: 08:56 EDT, 27 March 2026

It’s something that most of us learn as toddlers.

But a new test will have you questioning everything you thought you knew about colours.

The ‘What’s My JND?’ test shows you two colours and asks you to click the line between them. 

This might sound easy, but as you progress through the game, the colours become more similar – making finding the line much trickier. 

‘You see two colours. Click on the line between them. That’s it. It starts easy. It does not stay easy,’ the game’s instructions explain.  

‘Each round the colours get closer together until we find your Just Noticeable Difference – the smallest colour change you can actually see.’

The game usually takes around 40 rounds, with the average score coming out as 0.02. 

So, can you do any better? 

The ‘What’s My JND?’ test shows you two colours and asks you to click the line between them

The game usually takes around 40 rounds, with the average score coming out as 0.02

The game usually takes around 40 rounds, with the average score coming out as 0.02

The game is the brainchild of software engineer, Keith Cirkel, who set out to understand ‘just how precise is precise enough’ when it comes to colours on a screen.

To play, visit the game here, and tap or click the white button that reads ‘Let’s go’. 

Each round, you’ll be shown two colour blocks on your screen, and all you need to do is find the boundary. 

After each guess, you’ll be told if you got it right, or if you were wildly off. 

In the early stages, you’ll see two very different colours – grey and blue, brown and orange, or purple and blue, for example. 

However, as the game goes on, the shades will become more and more similar. 

At the end of the game, you’ll be given your score, and told how it stacks up against the other people who have played it. 

‘Rough. But look, I once failed a colour vision test because the room had fluorescent lighting. Environment matters. Try again in a dark room with your brightness cranked. Or don’t. I’m not your mum,’ a message reads if your score is low. 

In the early stages, you'll see two very different colours - grey and blue, brown and orange, or purple and blue, for example. However, as the game goes on, the shades will become more and more similar

In the early stages, you’ll see two very different colours – grey and blue, brown and orange, or purple and blue, for example. However, as the game goes on, the shades will become more and more similar

If you nail the test and want more of a challenge, you'll be happy to hear that Mr Cirkel has also created a Hard Mode

If you nail the test and want more of a challenge, you’ll be happy to hear that Mr Cirkel has also created a Hard Mode 

In contrast, if you nail it, you might see a message saying: ‘Genuinely remarkable. You sailed past the theoretical human limit like it owed you money. I’d accuse you of cheating but I don’t actually how you’d cheat at this.’ 

If you nail the test and want more of a challenge, you’ll be happy to hear that Mr Cirkel has also created a Hard Mode. 

In this version, you’ll be shown nine squares – eight the same colour and one that is different. All you have to do is find the odd one out. 

The game has proved popular, with many players taking to X to discuss their scores. 

‘This is great fun. How good is your colour perception? What are the finest shades you can distinguish? Apparently I’m a bit special,’ one user tweeted. 

Another replied: ‘Some were just completely uniform to me. I had no idea. Had to keep tilting my screen all ways to try to spot a border but still ended up guessing.’

And one joked: ‘Not bad considering I’m colourblind.’ 

ANIMALS SEE USING COMPLEX STRUCTURES IN THEIR EYES

Animals, including humans, have a variety of complex structures in their eyes which allow them to see.

The pupil contracts to limit how much light is allowed in, much like a camera lens.  

Most animals have both cones and rods in their eyes, which are called photoreceptors and are found in the retina. 

Cones allow people to see colour and rods are sensitive to low-light levels which allows for a grey scale between black and white.  

Humans, and many other animals, have three types of cones which each absorbs different wavelength of lights. 

With short, medium and long wavelength cones, the range of cones allows for a range of vision which incorporates the visible light spectrum.

This includes colours between red and blue – wavelengths ranging between 390 an 700 nm.

Other species, including many birds,  have four cones instead of three in a mutation known as tertrachromacy. 

This allows for animals to see light of an unusually short wavelength, which is normally considered to be UV light. 

These photoreceptors are triggered by light and then this produces an electrical signal as they change shape. 

Electrical signals are then carried to the brain via the optic nerve. 

Signals from both optic nerves are then brought together by the brain at  a point called the optic chiasm where the brain compares the two images.

This is what gives animals an understanding of depth and how far away objects are in their field of vision.  

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How good is YOUR colour perception? Deceptively difficult test tasks you with finding the boundary between two shades – so, how far can you get?



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