Shapes & Colors — shapez 2 Factory Wiki
Notation is a player shorthand. It is incredibly useful for guides, screenshots, and planning — but it is still just a representation of what you can see in-game.
Quadrants and layers (the mental picture)
Most classic shapes are easiest to imagine as a small 2×2 grid per layer: four quadrants, each can be empty or filled, and layers stack vertically. When a delivery fails, the game is usually telling you that one quadrant’s geometry, color, or support is wrong — not that “the factory is cursed.”
Shape notation: how to read it
Guides often write shapes as compact strings. In general, you can read them like a clock around the quadrants, with pairs of symbols describing type and color. If you are new, do not memorize everything on day one. Instead, learn to recognize patterns: full layers, half layers, missing corners, stacked duplicates, and “only one quadrant differs.”
- Work from the delivery UI — compare notation to the picture; they should match.
- Change one thing at a time — if you changed paint and geometry broke, revert one step.
- Write your target on paper — surprisingly effective for stacking mistakes.
Color mixing: think like light, not like paint cans
The game’s mixing model behaves more like additive light than kindergarten paint pots. That is why “red + green” reads as yellow-ish outputs in many games of this style. The player skill is to build a mixing workspace: keep primaries accessible, build secondaries deliberately, and avoid mixing chains that loop back on themselves accidentally.
White paint: build it like a small factory
White is a milestone in your head, not just a color. Players struggle when they try to “borrow” white occasionally from a messy mixer chain. Instead, treat white production as a dedicated district: three primaries in, verified flow, a clear output trunk, and obvious buffers when machines stall.
Crystals: commitment mechanics
Crystals are often a one-way door: they can lock you out of further cuts or repaints depending on the rules in your version. The safe player habit is: finish geometry first, verify the shape visually, then crystallize the parts you intend to freeze.
Pins: invisible scaffolding
Pins are the “structural glue” for shapes that need support in awkward places. If your shape looks right in your head but fails delivery, check whether a layer is floating without support. When you first learn pins, build a tiny test shape in a corner of your factory dedicated to experiments.
Community tier lists
If you want to rank shapes, milestones, or modes with friends, a simple external board helps: Tier List Maker.
Practice drill: compare target vs output (no guessing)
When a delivery fails, do not “change three things and hope.” Use a boring procedure: snapshot the target (screenshot or quick sketch), then inspect your output in the same orientation. Compare quadrant by quadrant. Most failures are a single mismatched corner, a swapped layer order, or a missing support rule — not a wholesale redesign.
- Check symmetry — if the target is symmetric but yours is not, you rotated the wrong half somewhere.
- Check empties — empty corners are data. They often mean you must route “nothing” intentionally, not accidentally fill.
- Check color last — players love repainting first, but geometry errors hide behind new paint.
Color district layout (player-friendly)
Treat paint like a small town with three neighborhoods: extract, mix, and deliver. Extraction should be boringly reliable. Mixing should be visibly labeled (even if the label is just your own mental map). Delivery should have a trunk that other factories can tap like a utility.
If your color area is hard to extend, you probably mixed those neighborhoods together. Separation is not inefficiency — it is future-you thanking present-you.
Crystal and pin mistakes that look like “bug reports”
Support rules can feel like hidden mechanics because they punish almost-correct shapes. If you are confident in your geometry but deliveries fail, revisit support: pins, crystals, and layer constraints are the usual suspects. Build a tiny “lab platform” for experiments so you can test one rule without risking your main bus lines.