Current color
Blue • #0000FF
Use labeled color buttons, fullscreen, brightness, custom hex, and auto-rotate without leaving the current route.
Instant fullscreen color for black, white, red, green, blue, yellow, grey, cyan, magenta, and custom hex workflows.
A blue screen route is useful for panel inspection, color-channel comparison, and general fullscreen color reference. Some searchers mean a pure blue screen and some mean a blue screen test, so the page needs to stay clear that this is a utility color page, not a system crash explanation.
A blue screen is useful when you want to isolate blue channel behavior and compare how the panel handles saturated blue against red, green, and white. It can also help reveal uneven tint or dirty spots that show up differently on cool backgrounds.
This route intentionally serves pure blue screen utility intent, not operating system crash troubleshooting. Keeping the page focused on fullscreen color use avoids muddying the product with unrelated support intent.
Blue often works best as part of a comparison sequence. A monitor that looks fine on white may still show odd tint or unevenness once blue fills the screen, which is why a dedicated route still makes sense.
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It is used to show one solid fullscreen color for photography, lighting, display inspection, cleaning, contrast checks, chroma-key reference, and simple blank-screen utility use.
A white screen can work as a quick bounce or fill surface, while a grey screen can act as a calmer neutral-looking reference during exposure and scene setup.
Yes. Switching between black, white, red, green, blue, yellow, cyan, magenta, and grey can help reveal dust, stuck pixels, tint, and uneven panel behavior.
Dead Pixel Test is a guided diagnostic workflow. Color Screen is a utility-first fullscreen tool designed to stay open and switch instantly between solid colors.
The tool uses a direct pure green utility value so the fullscreen green screen stays predictable and easy to use for reference and simple chroma-key-adjacent tasks.
Use the fullscreen button in the overlay or press F. Press Escape to leave fullscreen mode.
Yes. You can set a custom hex value, apply it instantly, and reuse recent custom colors saved in local storage.
Normal use should not damage a display, but very long static sessions at extreme brightness are not ideal for some panels. Use brightness control and vary colors when appropriate.
Yes. Many users open a fullscreen white, black, or green screen for room-light experiments, quick visual cleanup, or simple streaming setup checks.
Because a plain fullscreen color page solves practical real-world tasks fast. The value is speed, clarity, and staying open without friction.