50+ Free Printable Fortnite Coloring Pages
More Than Half of Parents Are Worried About This And You Can Do Something About It
If you’re reading this, you probably know the feeling: your kid is bouncing off the walls asking to play Fortnite again, and you’re thinking, “But they’ve already had screen time today.”
54% of parents report genuine concern their child is addicted to screens, with exposure to inappropriate content, sleep issues, and addiction ranking as the top three fears for 2025. It’s not paranoia. It’s real parental anxiety in a gaming world that moves fast.
Here’s the thing: you don’t have to shut down the Fortnite obsession.You just need to redirect it.
Fortnite coloring pages solve that problem. Your kid gets to spend time with their favorite characters Peely, Drift, Fishstick, all of them—but in a creative, screen-free way. We’ve gathered 100+ free, high-quality printable designs organized by difficulty level, so whether your 6-year-old is picking up crayons for the first time or your 15-year-old wants a detailed challenge, there’s something here.
Looking for more? Try these related coloring pages!
No signup. No watermarks. No paywall. Just click, download, print, and color.
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👩🎨 About the Author
Mimi Alstra
Why Fortnite Coloring Pages Are Actually a Smart Parenting Move (Science Backs This Up)
You might think coloring is just “keeping them busy.” It’s not. There’s actual developmental science happening here.
Fine Motor Skills Get a Real Workout
Children who color regularly improve grip strength by over 20%, enhancing dexterity needed for writing and other fine motor tasks. When your kid is gripping a crayon or colored pencil to fill in the detailed armor on a Fortnite skin, they’re literally strengthening the exact muscles they’ll use for handwriting, buttoning shirts, and tying shoelaces.
That grip strength matters. Teachers notice it. Academic readiness improves.
It Builds Focus and Patience
Coloring isn’t passive. It requires decision-making: “What color should Agent Peely’s tuxedo be?” It’s not blue in the game, so should I use the real color or make it purple? That’s active thinking.
Studies show coloring activities help improve patience, self-control, and neatness in children through observing and precise color-stroke work. In a world where everything is instant (swipe left, next video, skip ad), coloring slows things down in a healthy way.
It Respects Their Interests While You Control the Medium
Here’s the parenting truth: fighting their interests doesn’t work. Redirecting them does.
Your kid loves Fortnite, That’s not going to change by saying “no screens.” But coloring lets them stay in that world they love choosing colors for Fishstick, recreating battle scenes, perfecting details without a screen. You’re not saying no. You’re offering an alternative that feels creative and fun to them.
It's Legitimate Screen-Time Replacement
Parents often feel guilty about screen time. Coloring removes that guilt. It’s free, it’s offline, it’s educational (motor skills, focus, creativity), and this matters your kid actually wants to do it because it’s Fortnite.
How to Download & Print (Super Simple, Even for Non-Tech Parents)
We know not everyone is tech-savvy, so let’s make this straightforward.
Step 1: Choose Your Design
Scroll to the library below. Click the PDF download link next to any design you like. It opens in a new tab.
Step 2: Save or Print Directly
On Desktop:
- Right-click the PDF → “Save As” → choose a folder
- Or just hit Ctrl+P (Windows) or Cmd+P (Mac) to print directly
On Mobile/Tablet:
- Tap the download arrow at the top of the PDF
- Or tap the three dots → “Print”
Step 3: Set Your Print Settings (This Matters)
Before you hit print, take 30 seconds here:
- Color Mode: Make sure it’s set to “Color” not “Grayscale”
- Paper Size: Select Letter (8.5″ × 11″) or A4, depending on your region
- Orientation: Should be Portrait (vertical)
- Copies: Print as many as you want—we don’t charge per page
Step 4: Print and Hand Over
Load paper in the tray, hit print, and give your kid the page with crayons. That’s it
Quick Troubleshooting:
- “It won’t open” → Make sure you have Adobe Reader (free download)
- “Colors look faded” → Check if your printer is in “Best Quality” or “Photo” mode
- “The image looks cut off” → Check the “Fit to Page” option in print settings
Pro Coloring Tips From Parents Who've Done This 1,000 Times
We’ve watched thousands of kids color these pages, and patterns emerge. Here are the things that make the difference between a frustrated kid and a happy one.
Let Them Break the Rules (Seriously)
Peely is always yellow in the game. But what if your kid wants to color him purple? Let them.
Fortnite skins come in strict color palettes in the game, which means kids sometimes feel locked into those colors. Coloring is the one place they get creative control. Purple Peely? Acceptable. Rainbow Raven? Go for it.
The point isn’t photo-realism. It’s creativity and self-expression.
Lighting Matters More Than You'd Think
If your kid is squinting or complaining their hand hurts, it’s usually lighting, not effort.
Coloring requires focus. Poor lighting causes eye strain, which makes kids give up faster. Set up a simple table lamp next to where they’re working. Natural window light in the afternoon works great too.
Good lighting = more patience = finished pages you’re both proud of.
Make It Social (Family Coloring Night)
Kids color longer and with more focus when you’re doing it with them.
Set aside 30 minutes on a weekend evening. You grab a design (pick a detailed one—you’ll surprise yourself), your kid grabs theirs, maybe some music or a show on low volume in the background. You’re all coloring together.
Parents often find this meditative. Kids stay focused because they see you taking it seriously. It’s a screen-free family activity that costs nothing.
Display Their Finished Work
When your kid finishes a page, don’t let it disappear into a folder.
Put it on the fridge with a magnet. Frame the really good ones. Take a photo and text it to a grandparent. Kids color with way more effort and care when they know their work is going to be seen.
This is also a trust signal—you’re saying “This is good work. I’m proud of it.”plan their time.
Realistic Time Expectations
Manage expectations upfront:
- Easy designs: 10–15 minutes
- Medium designs: 25–35 minutes
- Detailed designs: 45 minutes to 2+ hours (might span multiple sessions)
Tell your kid: “This one usually takes about 30 minutes. That’s one movie scene or half a show.” It prevents frustration and helps them
Print Settings That Don't Waste Ink (A Quick Guide)
This section saves you money and frustration.
DPI Settings (What the Heck Is DPI?)
DPI = Dots Per Inch. Higher DPI = sharper, more detailed image. For coloring pages, you don’t need maximum DPI. It just wastes ink.
Our Recommendation by Tool:
- Crayons: 100–150 DPI (thick lines are already visible)
- Colored Pencils: 200–300 DPI (you want detail for blending)
- Markers: 150 DPI (bold colors cover lower resolution fine)
How to change DPI on your printer:
- Open the PDF
- Click “Print” or Ctrl+P
- Look for “Printer Properties” or “More Settings”
- Find “Quality” or “Resolution” and select the DPI
Frequently Asked Questions
Are These Designs Really Free Forever?
Yes, 100%. We believe in making creativity accessible. No paywalls, no subscription. The PDFs are yours to download and print as many times as you want for personal, non-commercial use.
That means you can print one for your kid, one for their friend, one for their classroom. No charges.
Can I Share These With Other Parents and Teachers?
Yes. Share the link to this article. If a parent asks “Do you have a link to where you got those Fortnite pages?” send them here.
What you can’t do: Don’t claim the designs are yours, and don’t sell printed copies. The artwork remains our intellectual property.
Do I Need Special Software to Open These?
Nope. Adobe Reader (free, already on most computers) or Preview on Mac. That’s it.
If you’re opening on a smartphone, the PDF app that comes with your phone works fine.
Which Designs Are Best for My Specific Child's Age?
- Ages 5–7: Stick to Easy level. Simple outlines keep frustration low.
- Ages 8–10: Medium level usually hits the sweet spot. Enough detail to feel challenging, not overwhelming.
- Ages 11–13: Mix medium and detailed. Kids this age often surprise you with their patience for detail.
- Ages 13+: Detailed level if they’re into art. But honestly, some teens just want the easy designs to relax with.
Can My Child Color These Digitally Instead of Printing?
If they’re comfortable with a drawing tablet or iPad app, sure. Digital coloring teaches similar skills (fine motor, focus, color theory).
But here’s the honest thing: printed coloring pages have a different quality. It’s tactile. There’s no undo button. The relationship to paper and pencil is more forgiving and less “performative” than screen-based coloring.
For kids who struggle with screens, printed pages are genuinely better.
How Often Do You Add New Designs?
Every time Fortnite releases a new season (roughly every 6–8 weeks), we add new character skins and designs.
We also add seasonal content:
- Halloween designs (October)
- Winter/Holiday designs (December)
- Back-to-school designs (August)
If you want notifications when new designs drop, sign up for our email list at the bottom of this page. We only send one email per season—not spammy, just “Hey, new designs are up!”
What If I Request a Specific Character?
Email us at funtoocolor@gmail.com. We genuinely read these and take requests seriously. If 3+ people ask for the same character, we make it.
Popular recent requests: Ninja skin, new Chapter 7 skins, holiday variants.
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