Skip to content
Scratch 3.0 is here!
Scratch 3.0 is here!

Scratch 3.0 is here!

4.78 / 5 · 0 Comments

About Scratch 3.0 is here!

7972 votes

Scratch 3.0 is Here! looks like a cute little browser music toy at first, but it has way more personality than most drag-and-drop sound games. You place oddball characters into seven slots, build a looping track in seconds, and then the whole thing can suddenly turn creepy in a way that honestly caught me off guard. If you like messing with beats more than chasing scores, this one is easy to get into.

Key Features

  • Drag 20 character buttons into seven active performance slots.
  • Every character adds its own loop, dance, and screen presence.
  • Quick mixing with no tutorials, timers, or complicated controls.
  • Secret horror switch tied to the last button on row two.
  • Replay cheerful combos and creepy remixes side by side.

How to play

The basic idea is simple: drag one of the twenty character buttons into a top slot and it joins the song. You can use up to seven at once, swap them out whenever you want, and shape the loop by pure trial and error.

Every little performer adds two things at the same time: a sound and a visual. As soon as a button lands, that character pops to life, starts dancing, and vibrates along with its own beat, so the screen becomes a tiny stage instead of a static soundboard.

What I ended up doing was filling five or six slots first, then leaving one open to test new sounds quickly. That makes it really easy to hear which character adds a bassy thump, which one brings a weird vocal, and which one completely throws off the groove.

The limit of seven active slots is a smart choice. It keeps your mix from becoming a total mess, and it pushes you to actually listen to what each character contributes instead of just dumping all twenty on the screen.

There is no long tutorial, no upgrade tree, and no level wall stopping you. Scratch 3.0 is Here! works best when you treat it like a browser beat maker: throw in a few sounds, yank one back out, and keep nudging the loop until it makes you grin.

What makes it stand out

What makes it stand out is the huge mood swing and how cleanly the game sets it up. The twentieth button, sitting at the far end of the second row, is not just another sound option; it acts like a hidden switch that changes the whole performance.

When you drop that last character into a slot, the cheerful setup does not just get a spooky filter. The faces get darker and more unsettling, the bright goofy energy disappears, and the audio turns into colder, creepier loops that make the same cast feel wrong in the best way.

That contrast is why I kept replaying it. Most online music mixers stay in one lane, but Scratch 3.0 is Here! basically gives you a before-and-after version of your song, so you can build something bouncy first and then see how the horror remix twists the mood.

I also like how readable everything is. Twenty buttons and seven slots sound simple on paper, but in practice it means you spend almost all your time testing combinations instead of hunting through menus, and that clean setup makes the surprise hit even harder.

There is also a fun little tension once you know the trick. You start watching that final icon like it is a red button in a horror movie, deciding whether to keep your happy mix going or press your luck and wreck the vibe on purpose.

FAQ

Is Scratch 3.0 is Here! hard to learn?

Nope. If you can drag and drop, you already know the controls, and the real fun comes from hearing how different characters bounce off each other rather than mastering any tricky timing.

Is the horror part actually scary?

It is more creepy than full-on nightmare fuel, but the shift is still sharp enough to land. Because the game spends time being silly and bright first, the darker faces and colder sounds feel a lot weirder than you would expect from such a simple setup.

Can you replay it after the surprise wears off?

Absolutely, and that is the best reason to click back in. Once you know which button triggers the change, you can build specific tracks before the switch, compare them with the horror version, and mess around like you are making two songs out of one idea.

If you enjoy browser music games, weird rhythm toys, or light horror with a playful setup, this is a fun one to recommend to a friend. Give Scratch 3.0 is Here! a few minutes, mess with the seven slots, and see whether your next loop ends up cute, creepy, or somehow both at once.

Comments (0)

No comments yet.

Related Games