Pure Green, Maximum Intensity
Lime (#00FF00) is literally 255-green, 0-red, 0-blue. Your monitor's green channel at maximum output. One of the most eye-catching colors possible on a digital display.
There's a reason gaming culture and tech aesthetics gravitate toward this color—it's impossible to ignore.
Click above for full-screen lime. Good for energy boosts, monitor testing, or when you need maximum visual intensity.
What People Use This For
Monitor and Display Testing
Pure green channel output. Essential for calibration, dead pixel detection, color accuracy checks. If you're testing displays, this is the green you need.
Energy and Alertness
Lime wakes you up. The intensity stimulates alertness and helps shake off grogginess. Works best in short bursts—this much visual energy isn't sustainable long-term.
Gaming Aesthetic
That neon green gaming vibe. Create the atmosphere or test your display's performance.
High Visibility
One of the most attention-grabbing colors available. Good for signage testing, alerts, or anything requiring maximum noticeability.
4. High-Intensity Workouts
Lime creates energizing environments for exercise. The vibrant color boosts motivation and adds intensity to workout sessions.
5. Attention-Grabbing Displays
Use lime when you need maximum visibility. It's one of the most eye-catching colors, perfect for signage testing or alerts.
6. Gaming Atmosphere
Lime is popular in gaming culture and aesthetics. Create vibrant gaming environments or test display performance.
7. Youth-Focused Events
Lime's youthful energy makes it perfect for young, dynamic atmospheres. Great for parties, events, and energetic gatherings.
8. Creative Stimulation
Use lime for short bursts of creative energy. The intensity stimulates fresh ideas but works best in limited doses.
9. Safety and Visibility
Lime's high visibility makes it useful for safety applications. Test visibility displays or create attention-demanding environments.
10. Digital Art Reference
Pure lime is a primary digital color. Use as a reference for digital art, understanding RGB values, and color theory.