Vexle — the daily flag drawing game.
First round?
How to play Vexle in three moves.
Vexle is a daily flag memory game: rebuild a country's flag without seeing it, then find out what your memory kept.
- Read the country
Vexle gives you a country name, never the flag itself.
- Draw from memory
Use Vexle's brush, fill bucket, and shapes to rebuild what you remember.
- Reveal & compare
See your drawing beside Vexle's official flag and receive a server score.
Daily draw / Round 01
The drawing desk
Draw first. Reveal once.
Draw the flag of
France
Loading today's flag…
02 / Field notes
Vexle, before you begin.
Short answers about the daily flag, drawing tools, and how your score works.What is Vexle?
Vexle is a daily flag drawing game where your goal is to recreate the hidden vexle flag as accurately as you can. Instead of simply choosing a country from a list, you are asked to draw the flag from memory, reveal the real answer, and compare your sketch with the official design.
Each Vexle puzzle is built for players who enjoy flags, geography, visual memory, and quick daily challenges. You do not need to be a flag expert before you start. The game helps you learn by making you notice colors, layouts, symbols, stripes, stars, crosses, and other details that make every flag different.
How to play Vexle?
To play Vexle, look at the country prompt and draw that country's flag on the canvas. Your task is to recreate the vexle flag from memory, then use Reveal & compare to place your drawing beside the real flag and see how close your match is.
Start with the biggest shapes first. In Vexle, it usually helps to block out the main structure before worrying about tiny details: horizontal stripes, vertical stripes, a cross, a triangle, a circle, a center emblem, or a symbol near the hoist. Once the basic layout of the vexle flag is in place, add the colors and smaller marks as carefully as you can.
The drawing tools are there to help beginners move quickly. Use Brush for freehand shapes, Fill for large color areas, Rect for clean stripes and blocks, Circle for suns or round emblems, Line for borders or diagonal bands, and Eraser when you need to fix part of the sketch. The color palette and custom color picker let you match the vexle flag more closely, while Undo and Clear help you recover from mistakes without restarting the whole game.
A good Vexle strategy is to think like a flag designer: place colors in the right position, keep proportions simple, and focus on the features that make the flag recognizable. Your drawing does not need to be perfect, but the more accurately you capture the layout, color order, and key symbols, the better your vexle flag comparison will feel.
What drawing tools are included?
Vexle includes a brush, fill tool, eraser, rectangle tool, circle tool, line tool, undo, clear, a color palette, and a custom color picker. These tools make it easier to draw common flag patterns such as stripes, crosses, circles, triangles, borders, and simple emblems.
The canvas works with a mouse, trackpad, stylus, or touch input. On smaller screens, the controls are arranged so you can choose a color, switch tools, adjust brush size, and reveal the answer without needing a keyboard.
Why play a flag drawing game?
Drawing a flag from memory tests a different skill than multiple-choice guessing. You have to remember the structure of the flag, place each color in the right region, and decide which details matter most for recognition.
That makes Vexle useful for casual geography practice, classroom warmups, trivia fans, and anyone who wants a short visual memory challenge. The comparison view gives immediate feedback, so each puzzle can teach you something about flag design even when your sketch is not exact.
Is there a new Vexle puzzle every day?
Yes. Vexle is designed as a daily puzzle game, so you can come back regularly for a fresh vexle flag challenge. Each day gives you a new country prompt and a new chance to test how well you remember flag designs.
Some Vexle puzzles may feel familiar right away, while others ask you to slow down and recall the exact order of colors or the position of a symbol. Playing daily is a simple way to build stronger flag memory without turning the game into a long study session.
Does Vexle work on mobile?
Yes. Vexle works in modern mobile, tablet, and desktop browsers, so you can draw the daily vexle flag without installing an app. The canvas, color tools, drawing buttons, and reveal controls are designed to be usable on smaller screens.
On mobile, use your finger to sketch directly on the canvas and choose tools just like you would on desktop. For the smoothest Vexle experience, keep your browser updated and use a stable connection so the daily flag data and comparison view load properly.
How does Vexle score a flag drawing?
Vexle sends the 900 by 540 pixel canvas to the server when you choose Reveal & compare. The server checks colour similarity at points across the drawing and compares those samples with the expected flag pattern. Vexle converts the combined similarity into a percentage from 0 to 100. Your browser does not choose or submit its own score.
Position and colour matter most in Vexle scoring. Correctly placing stripes, fields, crosses, discs, or triangles helps more than polishing an emblem while the main layout is wrong. White space counts as part of the canvas, so unfinished regions can lower the result. The Vexle score is learning feedback rather than a judgment of artistic ability: reveal the answer, notice which large regions differ, and use that comparison to improve your visual memory.
What is the difference between Vexle Daily and Practice?
Vexle Daily gives every browser session one scored attempt at the UTC-day flag. After the first reveal, Vexle saves that result and restores it when the same browser returns. Locking the daily score keeps the challenge consistent: you can study the comparison, but repeatedly redrawing the same prompt will not replace today's percentage.
Practice mode is the unlimited side of Vexle. You can request another country, experiment with the drawing tools, reveal the answer, and continue without changing the daily result. Practice scores still appear in your session statistics, while the Daily result remains the value used for today's score and streak. No account is required for either mode; Vexle connects progress to a random browser session, and the Privacy page includes a control for deleting the associated drawings and results.