Color blindness affects approximately 8% of men and 1 in 200 women in the world.
On a rubik's cube or speedcube, the most common confused colors are orange and green (sometimes red). For a colorblind person these colors look a little grey and can be difficult to distinguish if the contrast is not sufficient.
There are many types and degrees of colorblindness, therefore the impact for each individual is different.
For colorblind solvers, we generally recommend cubes with a darker green. Ultimately though, because there are so many degrees we find that is sometimes takes a bit of trail and error to find the cube that a colorblind solver is comfortable with.
The picture below shows the orange green colors on some of our popular 3x3 cubes. Please use this to check with one has the best contrast for you.
5 comments
Sion Hughes
I’m not technically colourblind but retail damage means I struggle with yellow/white. So much so that I have to Sharpie Xs onto the white squares.
EL
I also have decreased color sensitivity. The yellow/white, yellow/orange and orange/red are the ones that give me the most issues, so I use stickered cubes. White becomes black, orange becomes purple and red becomes pink. The yellow and green I use are both vibrant enough that it’s helped me differentiate them.
DM
For me I commonly struggle with the orange and yellow on my cubes.
James Shirley
Just wanted to say thank you for your article. Some of the cubes have a great deal more contrast than other for me.
P.M.
As a partially colourblind solver, I find that a dark green as my green face is much better for recognition, though in my case it’s the yellow that I confuse it most with. For this reason too, I much prefer stickered cubes than stickerless, as the stickerless ones I’ve seen/have make the green and yellow very similar.