I Lost my Eggs: Easter scores 72/100 — better than 43% of Casual capsules (n=10,153).

Quick text summary

I Lost my Eggs: Easter scored 72/100 on Steam Analyzer — Good for a Casual capsule. Top priority fix: [title_readability] Unify the title into a single cohesive text block with stronger visual weight to improve scan speed at tiny 120×45px sizes.

Capsule scores by dimension

  • Genre Clarity: 8/10 — Easter casual puzzle game clear. The cute pastel bunny character, Easter egg motifs in the background pattern, and 'Easter' text directly communicate a holiday casual game with puzzle/search mechanics. At tiny size the bunny silhouette and egg patterns remain readable enough to suggest Easter-themed casual gameplay, though the specific 'hunt' mechanic becomes less obvious at smallest sizes.
  • Title Readability: 7/10 — Readable title with minor issues. The main title 'I Lost my Eggs Easter' uses clear white bubble lettering with cyan outline and black drop shadow, which maintains legibility at small size. However, the text is split across two visual zones (cyan 'I Lost my Eggs' and separate 'Easter' bubble), and at tiny 120×45px the letter forms compress and the spacing becomes tighter, making quick parsing slightly harder than a unified title block would.
  • Contrast & Color: 8/10 — Strong pop with vibrant pastels. Bright cyan, magenta, and peach tones create excellent separation against the dark Steam background (#1b2838). The white bubble lettering with black outlines pops cleanly, and the bunny's warm tan body contrasts well against the purple-to-magenta gradient. The design maintains readable silhouettes and color separation even in grayscale due to the light bunny against darker background elements.
  • Uniqueness & Polish: 7/10 — Cute indie aesthetic, modest originality. The art style is polished with clean vector-like character design, intentional pastel color grading, and a cohesive cute-casual visual language. However, the Easter egg hunt theme and chibi bunny character are fairly familiar indie game tropes; the capsule executes the look competently but does not introduce a distinctive visual hook or unique mechanic that sets it apart from similar casual titles like Moonstone Island or Tiny Glade.
  • Brand Consistency: 6/10 — Consistent style, generic visual identity. The capsule maintains a cohesive pastel color palette, soft vector art style, and cute character aesthetic that likely carries through the game's UI and screenshots. However, there are no distinctive brand icons, signature motifs, or memorable visual markers (like the crow in Snufkin or the fish in DAVE THE DIVER) that would make this capsule instantly recognizable upon future browsing.
  • Composition: 7/10 — Balanced layout with clear hierarchy. The bunny character anchors the right side as the primary focal point, while the cyan title sits left-center, creating a natural reading flow and avoiding dead space. The repeating egg pattern in the background provides texture without overwhelming detail. At small sizes the composition compresses well, though the split title across two bubbles slightly dilutes the single focal point that would strengthen legibility at tiny 120×45px.

What works

  • Vibrant color contrast. Cyan, magenta, and peach pastels create strong visual pop against Steam's dark background while maintaining readable silhouettes in grayscale.
  • Clear genre communication. The bunny character, Easter eggs in background, and 'Easter' text immediately signal a casual holiday puzzle game to viewers at all sizes.
  • Polished vector art style. The cute bunny character and typography show clean, intentional craft that feels more premium than generic asset collections.

What hurts the capsule

  • Generic visual identity. The cute bunny and pastel palette lack distinctive brand markers that would make the capsule memorable or recognizable on repeat visits.
  • Split title across two zones. The cyan 'I Lost my Eggs' and separate white 'Easter' bubble dilute focus and reduce hierarchy clarity at small sizes, making quick parsing less immediate.
  • Familiar indie aesthetic. The Easter egg hunt theme and chibi character style echo established casual indie games, offering limited visual differentiation in a crowded genre.

Priority fixes

  1. [title_readability] Unify the title into a single cohesive text block with stronger visual weight to improve scan speed at tiny 120×45px sizes.
  2. [uniqueness_polish] Add a distinctive visual hook—such as a signature icon, unique bunny expression, or visual narrative element—that conveys core gameplay (egg hunting) and sets this apart from generic Easter casual games.
  3. [brand_consistency] Introduce a recognizable brand motif or signature color accent that could appear consistently across store screenshots and future marketing to improve recall.

Store copy priority fixes

  1. [uniqueness] Replace generic descriptors like 'charming' and 'magical' with one concrete, distinctive visual or mechanical element (e.g., 'Explore a hand-painted church with over 100 hidden objects' or 'Earn hints by answering timed trivia challenges').
  2. [hook_strength] Rewrite the short description to lead with a specific, action-forward verb and outcome: 'Hunt for hidden Easter eggs across seven lavishly detailed rooms while solving trivia—the smarter you answer, the more you find.'
  3. [audience_targeting] Add a sentence that explicitly signals solo vs. family play mode and highlights an audience benefit (e.g., 'Solo players can tackle the hunt at their own pace; families can team up and share hints').
  4. [feature_communication] Expand the trivia feature description to clarify the hint mechanic: specify how many questions, difficulty level, or how hints directly aid the hunt (e.g., 'Answer true/false Easter trivia to unlock location hints that narrow your search').

Related guides

Steam app ID: 3286880 · Tags: Casual, Hidden Object, Cute, Education, Trivia