
Harry Styles
An eye for the aesthetic.
British singer and actor — One Direction alumnus, three solo No. 1 albums, and a fashion sensibility that has put him on more magazine covers than most bands manage in a career.

An eye for the aesthetic.
British singer and actor — One Direction alumnus, three solo No. 1 albums, and a fashion sensibility that has put him on more magazine covers than most bands manage in a career.
British singer and actor — One Direction alumnus, three solo No. 1 albums, and a fashion sensibility that has put him on more magazine covers than most bands manage in a career.
Harry Styles plays Gradient — two endpoints per round, rebuilt from memory — and an eye for the aesthetic is the whole point. The man has more magazine covers than most bands have singles, so a variant about getting two colours to sit right together suits him. He will be gracious about it and still beat you.
In the Color Memory Game, Harry Styles plays the Gradient variant — two-endpoint gradients to rebuild from memory each round. Every one of Harry Styles’s guesses is generated to land inside their personal accuracy band, so a bad round on their side stays in character and a great round on yours actually wins the match.
60–80% accuracy — a fair fight; consistency wins it.
His 70–80% accuracy is tighter and higher than Bad Bunny's, so the same Gradient board plays a notch harder. With a narrow band he rarely gifts a round, which means you cannot coast — both endpoints need to be genuinely close every time. Prioritize hue accuracy on both ends; a small saturation miss costs less than a hue miss in the average.
Want to face a different bot? See the full challenge roster — fifteen characters across five difficulty tiers, each with their own signature variant. Or play solo Gradient to drill the variant on your own first.