Japan Map
A new-map guide focused on reading layered colors, testing object clusters, and building repeatable seeker routes without inventing unverified coordinates.
Hider guide
Learn the best hiding spot types in Meccha Chameleon and compare hiding strategies by map without relying on unverified coordinates.
Filter by role, player count, and map type.
The best hiding spots combine color match, broken silhouette, nearby objects, low first-scan visibility, and a way to leave if a Seeker gets too close.
A new-map guide focused on reading layered colors, testing object clusters, and building repeatable seeker routes without inventing unverified coordinates.
A colorful, social-play oriented map where Hiders should test color families carefully and Seekers should prioritize unusual outlines.
A beginner-friendly official-map entry for learning silhouette control, simple scan routes, and safe object-cluster hiding.
A recommended slot type for maps built around color practice, compact rooms, and repeatable beginner drills.
A party-map recommendation slot for funny rounds, quick resets, and easy callouts with friends.
An advanced-map recommendation slot for players who want vertical scans, route discipline, and high-risk hiding choices.
A small-group recommendation slot for short rounds where every corner can be checked quickly.
A funny large-map recommendation slot for dense object clusters, quick callouts, and chaotic friend lobbies.
Avoid empty corners, isolated bright areas, spots with no object support, and places that require constant movement to maintain the disguise.
FAQ
Meccha Chameleon maps are the play spaces that decide how Hiders blend in, how Seekers scan, and which routes or color choices work best.
Start with smaller, lower-complexity maps where players can learn color matching, outline control, and basic seeker sweeps without too much visual noise.
Yes. The MVP includes Workshop map pages and installation guidance, with recommendation slots designed for manually verified Steam Workshop entries.
Only when they can be verified. For new or untested maps, the guide explains how to evaluate hiding spots without inventing fake coordinates.
A strong hiding spot has good color match, a broken silhouette, nearby objects that explain your shape, low first-scan visibility, and a backup route.