Palette Swap



""It's just like the old days, reusing the boss, changing its color and pretending it is completely new.""

- Cranky Kong, Donkey Kong Country (Game Boy Advance port)

In 2D game development, the creation of sprites is a labor-intensive task; moreso if the sprites are animated. One cost-effective method for increasing the variety of game characters is to reuse the same sprite, but using a different color palette.

This is seen in some platformers, but it most often appears in Role-Playing Games and Fighting Games. In fighting games, this is commonly used to differentiate players using the same character, but it is also employed to create "new" characters. In the 8- and 16-bit era RPGs, it was pervasive: because of console limitations, disk and screen space were serious concerns. Palette Swapping was used to create a large variety of different enemies, often using different colors for various power levels. (The most famous group of these are probably the Slimes, topped by the powerful Metal Slime, of Dragon Quest fame.)

In 3D game development, however, changing only the colors has mostly died off, but there are similar variations. Because animation is no longer tied directly to models, it is much easier to create new models and textures for a character while still using the same animation set. Clever code can even allow you to use differently sized characters with the same animations. However, this was not new to 3D: On the SNES, some RPGs were able to use the foreground and background layers to put something in front of the tiles, changing the appearance of the original monster "sprite", making this aversion Older Than They Think.

Not even modern games are entirely immune to this primarily 2D game pitfall, however. Massively Multiplayer Online Roleplaying Games MMORPGs are often set in a very large world that must be populated by monsters. Palette Swap to the rescue! By changing the size and textures used on the same model, the designers can make many types of monsters from only a few basic meshes. Sometimes even bosses are simply re-textured and huge versions of weaker monsters.

Some fans of fighting games use the term to refer to characters that use the same animations and move sets, even if the characters look very different. Individual characters may also have a choice of several different colors or costumes (or both).

Color-Coded Multiplayer is a Sub-Trope, applied to player characters. When the head (or any other body part) is changed as well, then it's more accurately a Head Swap. Color-Coded Armies may also show up in 2D games. For a similar time-saving technique, see Ambidextrous Sprite.

See also Color-Coded for Your Convenience. This trope is used in part to create Copy and Paste Environments, Ditto Fighter, and Underground Monkeys. Only Six Faces is a related animation version. Though the visual effect may be similar, this trope is not related to Adaptation Dye Job.

Action Adventure

 * The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask is a lazy-designer example of Palette Swap: Almost all of the Mooks and NPCs, as well as a few of the masks, were ported over from Ocarina of Time. At least the map and the bosses were different.
 * It was "explained" in the game. Termina seems to be a sort of "mirror-universe" next-door to Hyrule (dimensionally speaking)...in several cases, the names don't even change, regardless of how similar the counterparts are to each other aside from appearances—notably, Koume and Kotake, whose Hyrule counterparts were stated to be Ganondorf's surrogate mothers, are merely shopkeepers in Termina's Southern Swamp and not evil like the former two. In other words, the people of Hyrule have mirror counterparts in Termina. This is a common sci-fi and fantasy trope.
 * It was also originally intended to be an expansion of Ocarina of Time on the ill-fated N 64 DD, so they were limited by that concept during development.
 * All the Legend of Zelda games are guilty of this. In the first game, most monsters came in Red and Blue, with one color (usually blue) being tougher than the other. In Zelda II the Adventure of Link, orange was added for weaker variants of enemies, with red being stronger than orange and blue being stronger than red, though with armed enemies the weapons often change with the color (such as the orange variant of the Daira enemy in Death Mountain swinging its axe at Link and the red variant throwing axes at him). It's even common to palette swap Link for his different tunics. Same style and cut, different color. Like the fire-proof tunic (red), and the inexplicable water-breathing tunic (blue). Boy, it's astounding what they can do with cloth shirts these days. It wasn't until The Legend of Zelda Twilight Princess that the different tunics actually looked different beyond their colors.
 * Blaster Master had two bosses that were Palette Swaps of one another. The palette-swapped versions were very hard to beat.
 * The handheld Castlevania games since Harmony of Dissonance have been accused of palette swapping (some point out the Saturn Port of Symphony of Night had Maria's spells being copied out of Gradius games, showing that this practice has been around much longer then most initially suspected). Some think the naming of the recolored Minotaur in Aria of Sorrow as simply Red Minotaur might be a Lampshade Hanging.
 * The palette swapping of the Metroidvania games shares a common source point: Castlevania: Rondo of Blood. Almost everything else is from Symphony of the Night instead. This is literally sprite reuse going from 1993 to about now. Harmony was worst about this though: many enemies had level 2 and even level 3 versions.

Action Game

 * Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle (a port of a Famicom Disk Sytem game starring Roger Rabbit-don't ask) has differently-colored enemies of the same type that behave slightly differently.
 * Devil May Cry 3: Special Edition plays this perfectly straight. When playing as Vergil and you come to the boss battles against Vergil (the game is usually played as Dante, with the Vergil playability a feature of the Special Edition), the Vergil you fight is dressed in red instead of his usual blue. Apparently it's to give the impression that you're fighting Dante, but the only difference between the two versions is the colour; the boss' moveset remains the same.
 * In the Rolling Thunder series, the attack patterns and hit points of the Maskers can be determined by the colors of their clothes and hoods.
 * Steve's jacket in Shatterhand turns from green to red when he buys the double strength Power-Up.

Beat Em Up

 * The arcade version of Double Dragon, in addition to the two player characters (Billy and Jimmy Lee), has a set of three enemy mooks (Williams, Rowper and Abobo) that it uses for every stage, but with a different palette each time, along with the occasional black variants. The two bosses, who are themselves head swaps of other characters, reappear in the final two stages as well (in particular, the third boss is the first boss with green skin). The only enemies who don't have palette swapped variants are Linda (who wears the same purple outfit in all of her appearances) and Machine Gun Willy (the final boss).
 * The Foot Clan ninjas in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles the Arcade Game (and its sequel, Turtles in Time) come in numerous colors in addition to the standard purple variant from the 1980s animated series. The Foot Soldiers are color coded to indicate their weapons of choice. For example, the white Foot Soldiers attack with katanas, while the orange ones wield boomerangs.
 * The Streets of Rage series used palette swaps for enemies very often
 * In the "Dueling" mode featured in the sequels, the second player is assigned a different palette if he chooses the same character as the first player.
 * In the first game, Onihime and Yasha (aka Mona and Lisa), the twin bosses in Round 5, were both palette swaps of Blaze but with a green outfit instead of red. In Round 8, they appear one more time with a dark purple outfit. When the twins returned in Streets of Rage 3, they were given a unique design.
 * In the third game, the boss of Round 3 was a robot copy of Axel, only difference was his gloves were purple instead of red so that players who played in co-op wouldn't attack each other by mistake if one of them was playing as Axel.
 * Also in the third game, Shiva and Roo (plus Ash in the Japanese version) change palettes when they become player characters.
 * Cyborg Justice pretty much embodies this trope since the player character can choose torso, weapon and legs which are interchangeable and used by virtually every other cyborg in every level at some point including bosses. The only unique enemy in the entire game is the end boss who is a giant brain. If you play with two players, then player 1 is primary gold and player 2 is primarily purple.
 * Golden Axe has a huge amount of palette-swapped characters, from the mooks to the bosses to the Bizzarians to the energy-replenishing elves.
 * Final Fight mostly averts this by making variants of the same enemy head swaps as well, but there are a few notable exception: Roxy is just Poison with orange hair and everyone in the Andore clan are identical except for the colors of their clothing (lavender for the standard Andore, red for Junior, gold for Father, black for Uncle and blue for Grandpa). There are also red-clothed variants of Holly Wood who carries Molotov cocktails instead of his usual knives.
 * Final Fight 2 for the SNES has a cheat code that allows both players to use the same character if selected, distinguishing the second player with a different palette.
 * The GBA version of the original game, Final Fight One, also allowed two players to choose the same character after defeating a certain number of enemies.
 * The arcade version of Ninja Gaiden (aka Shadow Warriors) features six stages, the same four staple adversaries, a few novelties here and there, three distinct end of stage bosses, one final boss, and a different palette for each stage. There are also ninja mooks who are just palette swaps of the player characters (who are already themselves palette swaps of each other).
 * The character designs in Fear Is Vigilance are basically limited to three: male, female, and Marcy in disguise. Everything else is palette swapping.
 * River City Ransom recycles the same enemy gang of nine members by changing the colors of their t-shirts, as well as modifying their stats and attack patterns.

Fighting Game

 * Mortal Kombat was one of the most notorious examples of this trope with its "Palette Swap Ninjas". There was an increasing number of ninja characters (Scorpion, Sub-Zero, et al.) of three basic types—male, female, cyborg—in the games, almost all of whom used the same basic set of sprites, with the color scheme altered to match the individual character. Illustrated here. With the advance of video game technology, in Mortal Kombat 4 and beyond the various ninjas have been redesigned to avoid this, however - particularly Reptile and Rain.
 * Mortal Kombat Trilogy was seriously getting short on colours for male ninjas: Sub-Zero (blue), Scorpion (yellow), Reptile (green), Rain (purple), Noob Saibot (black), Ermac (red), and Human Smoke (gray). In mirror matches, the twin was usually a slightly different shade of the same colour.
 * Note that the default ninjas in all four 2D Mortal Kombat games for the arcade (counting the original version of 3 and the Ultimate edition separately) actually had different fighting stances from each other, so they were not full-fledge palette swaps. However, the hidden variants played this straight.
 * In the first game, Reptile used Scorpion's fighting stance.
 * In Mortal Kombat II, Smoke uses Reptile's stance, Noob Saibot uses Sub-Zero's, and Jade uses Kitana's.
 * In Mortal Kombat 3, Robot Smoke uses Sektor's stance. Since none of the "human" ninjas were in the third game initially, Noob was instead a palette swap of Kano.
 * In Ultimate, all three female ninjas used their own stances; Noob, Ermac and Masked Sub-Zero used Scorpion's; while Rain and Human Smoke used Reptile's.
 * In Trilogy, Khameleon and Chameleon's stances would reflect who they were currently copying.
 * A famous example of the skin-color aspect of this trope was the character Nakoruru from the Fighting Game Samurai Shodown. The swapped palette used on her portrait in the character select screen made her look like her own Evil Twin. Naturally, the idea quickly entered Fanon, and Samurai Shodown V actually turned "Evil Nakoruru" into her own character.
 * This was most likely also a result of SNK actually intending the "Slash/Bust" division to represent good and evil sides (or at least different personalities), never being able to pull it off, and ultimately simply deciding to just make a couple variant characters and call it a day. The other, BTW, is Rastesumaru, a much, much different version of Haohmaru. (He has purple skin, for one. He's completely psycho, for another.)
 * In the Fighting Game Soul Calibur, the character Kilik is a Palette Swap—in the shared motion data sense—of Seung Mina. (This is explained in game by both characters using the same fighting style: Ling Sheng Su.)
 * Hwang is an odd case. In the original Soul Edge, he was a "motion swap" of Mitsurugi for Korean localization. In Soul Calibur, he became a swap of Xianghua, but shared some kicks with Seung Mina. By Soul Calibur III, he was the representative of the Chinese Sword style.
 * Actual Palette Swaping entered the Soul Calibur series with Custom Characters, as well as the ability to alter the colors worn by the standard fighters. Meanwhile, Tekken 5 offered color choices along with custom items as unlockables.
 * Namco fighting games in general usually feature at least one character who doesn't have their own moves, but instead randomly chooses movesets from all the other characters.
 * The Tekken series of games has had THREE. Mokujin (Tekken 3) and Combot (Tekken 4), which randomly emulated all the characters fighting styles, one per round, and Unknown (Tekken Tag Tournament) who looked sort of like Jun Kazama, but could only emulate about 15 or so characters out of the 30+ available (in addition to the resemblance, she always started with Jun's moveset). However, pressing down on the right stick on the PlayStation 2 controller (R3, as it is) would let you change fighting styles on the fly instead of having to tag out and back in all the time.
 * Namco's games also did tend to have fighters who shared many moves. Examples include the Jack 'clones' (ironically, of the ones with that label, only Kuma's been in all the games in some playable form), as well as characters with similar styles in game (Anna and Nina Williams, King and Armour King, Yoshimitsu and Kunimitsu). They're working on making each character more unique, though.
 * When Bandai released Gundam: The Battle Master 2 in the US as Gundam Battle Assault, they replaced one of the mecha with the titular Gundam from Gundam Wing in order to cash in on the show's then successful run on Cartoon Network. Despite going through the trouble of making a separate sprite for it, however, they gave it the same moveset as the Zeta Gundam. Further annoying is the fact that its super move involves grabbing the opponent instead of shooting its BFG.
 * Epic Megagames' fighting game One Must Fall makes extensive use of palette swaps. The game has 11 distinct (sprite) models of robots, but many more colour-schemes, all of which are achieved by changing parts of the game palette. In tournament mode, you can customize your robot's colour-scheme in three areas, and the game provides you with 16 colours to choose from.
 * There is an external free tool that lets you create your own tournaments, and you can give the computer opponents anything you like for their colour-schemes by editing the palette of the picture to go with their character.
 * Super Smash Bros.. uses this for alternative costumes.
 * If players choose the same characters for team battles, the brightness on the characters are changed.
 * A terrible 2D fighting game called Bloodstorm sported secret characters that were, for the most part, mere palette swaps of the ordinarily available characters with slightly different moves.
 * When the Street Fighter series started featuring same character matches (beginning with Street Fighter II′: Champion Edition), the game changes the palette of one player to distinguish it from the other. Depending on the character, some alternate palettes will simply change the color of the character's clothing (i.e. Ryu's gi and bandanna), while others (such as Dhalsim's and Blanka's) will change the character's skin tone to improbable colors such as blue or grey
 * Super Street Fighter II in particular features eight palettes for each character and each player chooses which one they want to use on the character select screen depending on the button pressed. However, the control panel only has seven buttons for each player (six attack buttons and Start), so the eighth palette can only be chosen by pressing any button and keeping it depressed for a few seconds.
 * Super Street Fighter II Turbo gave all of the returning fighters a new default palette, while the original default palettes are now used by alternate versions who retained their moveset from the original Super Street Fighter II. Moreover, these alternate versions of the characters have their own alternate palettes as well.
 * In the arcade version of Street Fighter Alpha 2, the character's palette changes depending on whether the player is using the Manual fighting style (three-level Super gauges) or Auto (one-level gauges, simpler inputs for Super Combos and Alpha Counters and auto-blocking). This was carried over to Alpha 3, when the fighting styles were expanded to A-ism (Alpha-style), X-ism (Super Turbo-style) and V-ism (Variable Combo-style).
 * Some versions of Alpha 2 (specifically the U.S. arcade release and the Zero 2 Alpha released in Asia) allowed players to control alternate versions of certain characters such as Zangief, Dhalsim, Ryu, Ken, classic outfit Chun-Li, Sagat and M. Bison who used their movesets from Street Fighter II Dash and had alternate color schemes. Evil Ryu and Shin Akuma were also palette-swaps of their regular counterparts.
 * In Street Fighter III 3rd Strike, there are a total 13 palettes for each character (except for Gill, who only has two). There are six standard palettes chosen by simply pressing any of the attack buttons, six alternate palettes chosen by holding Start and pressing any of the other buttons and a hidden 13th palette selected by pressing LP+MK+HP.
 * BlazBlue takes the palette-swapping tendencies of fighting games and runs right off the rails with them, often designing alternate color schemes to be visual references to other franchises. Observe Tager as GaoGaiGar, Noel as Major Kitsurabami, Rachel as Hatsune Miku, and Hazama as a Smooth Criminal. There's more, but the full list would probably eat the page.
 * Interestingly, Ragna as Sakata Gintoki. Made even better by the fact that they share the same voice actor (as parodied here).
 * Subverted in Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha A's: The Battle of Aces, where the three Materials are not just recolours of the Power Trio, but full-on Evil Twins with distinct personalities.
 * Capcom's Versus series do this, both mirror match style and new character style. The first Marvel vs. Capcom features War Machine, who is a palette swap of Iron Man from Marvel Super Heroes. Also, both Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter and Marvel vs. Capcom use palette swaps in creating the secret characters. Sometimes an attempt would be made to make them logical characters—MSHvsSF featured a US Agent as a Captain America swap, for example—while others made no sense whatsoever. Orange Hulk anyone?
 * In Marvel vs. Capcom 3 some of the palette swaps also double as Mythology Gags.
 * The original Eternal Champions game notably didn't have any. The sequel had palette swaps, head swaps and even leg (Riptide has Jetta's stance and Shadow's legs) swaps.
 * Primal Rage does this for the stages where you're fighting the character you chose to play as. Does have a benefit there as it helps you stay sure of who's who.
 * Clay Fighter also did this for the 'fight the character you're playing as' scenes.

First Person Shooter

 * The first Halo does this with the Grunts and Elites. You can tell how powerful these enemies are simply by their color. The in-game explanation is that their armor is color-coded by rank.
 * The subsequent games also do this, but also add fancier armor for certain Elite Mooks.
 * Bungie's earlier Marathon series used palette swapping extensively. An alien's uniform color denoted its rank, while a human's denoted his department.
 * BUILD Engine games, such as Duke Nukem 3D and Shadow Warrior, make use of palette changes on sprites and surfaces for a number of uses.
 * A number of surfaces which basically look the same, but have something a different colour (such as a row of tiles on a wall) use an internal palette change to provide more graphical variety without needing to include more textures.
 * Coloured lighting uses a palette change over the whole palette of anything in the area in question.
 * The ever-common alien Troopers and Captains in Duke Nukem 3D use the same sprites, but different internal palettes. The base sprites use blue for the uniform, but the Troopers use a palette that replaces it with green and the captains use one that replaces it with red.
 * On a similar note, the different colours of the trousers on the player sprites in multiplayer games are the result of palette swaps.
 * Putting the same palette used for blue light onto a sprite such as a weapon or switch in the level editor will (at least for Duke Nukem 3D) make that sprite only appear in deathmatch games.
 * Different palettes on special sprites which control level functionality can have various effects, ranging from simply changing the colour of a light to making a teleporter that doesn't show the usual teleporter effects, to determining what kind of enemy teleports in.
 * Palette swaps combined with translucency are also used to give the enemies shadows. Squash a copy of the sprite vertically, put it on the ground, put an all-black palette on it, then make it translucent.
 * Some levels also use all-black translucent palette swaps of sprites to add nice shadows to certain areas.
 * Then there are user-made levels which give oddly-coloured enemies via palette swaps just for the fun of it. Some sadistic authors put the all-black palette on the enemies and make them transparent. Great, now you're fighting almost-invisible aliens.
 * Doom, on the other hand, use palette swaps mostly for changing the uniform color of different players in multiplayer mode (the green armor becomes indigo, brown and red for players 2, 3 and 4); however a variant of palette swap is used for one of the monsters: the Spectre is a Demon whose sprite's shape is replaced by a zone of transparent static. In Doom 2, a palette swap was used to create the Hell Knight from the Baron of Hell; however both sets of sprites are present in the game's data.
 * Doom RPG, however, had "classes" of enemies that changed palettes according to their type and subsequent difficulty.
 * Team Fortress 2 is the epitome of palette swaps - not only are the classes identical save their team colour, at least three levels contain what are basically palette swapped bases, with changed materials and propaganda posters.
 * Not only that, but the September 30, 2010 update allows players to paint their hats.
 * Player-created maps are sometimes guilty of this aswell. There are several variations of 2fort with the exactly same layout, but one is at nighttime etc.
 * Pretty much every Capture the Flag map is literally just two bases that are exactly the same except they're mirrored and palette-swapped, with a few paths in between that connect them.
 * This was actually a contest, the winner of which was later used for the Mann Manor Halloween update.
 * BioShock (series) only had a few distinct Splicer models, with palette swapping used (mostly on their clothes) to make them slightly less identical.
 * Turok 2: Seeds of Evil has a few of these; the Cave Worm is a giant version of the Swamp Worm, the Fireborn is a firey version of the Endtrail, the Blind One Sentinels are a palette swap of the Flesh Eater Sentinels, and the Trooper is a palette swap of the Mantid Soldier.
 * Left 4 Dead 2 has the laser sights and special ammo using the same inworld model, but with different textures.
 * As well, to increase variety, the common infected use similar models, but have different skin/clothes colors.
 * Well, they are all zombified humans.
 * Perfect Dark for the N64 had Joanna (the main character) and her head-swap Velvet (controlled by Player 2 during Co-Op Mode). Since they were both Carrington Institute agents, they both wore the same uniform.
 * In Conduit 2, the models of the soldiers are all the same, but the armor they wear is chosen randomly.

General

 * Some old games palette swap everything after each level to give the player a sense of progress. Desert Falcon for the Atari 2600 looped between about eight colors as enemies moved slightly faster, so even field below changed from yellow to green to... pink?
 * Even the NES version of Tetris does this as the game's level increase.
 * The Game Boy Color, Game Boy Advance, and the Super Game Boy (for the SNES) allowed users to Palette Swap original Game Boy games entirely (at least the ones that weren't designed to take advantage of the color features of the devices).

Hack And Slash

 * The Diablo series is infamous for this, frequently featuring the same enemy 3-5 times by recoloring and renaming it.

Maze Game

 * One of the first games to use Palette Swaps was Pac-Man. If you haven't noticed, each of the 4 Ghost Monsters has a different way of chasing the player.

MMORPGs

 * Phantasy Star Online plays this straight for their non-unique weapons. All basic weapons only differentiate in color and name to denote how powerful they are (from weakest to strongest, the colors are green, blue, purple, red, and yellow.)
 * Phantasy Star Universe takes this a step further. In addition to non-unique weapons differentiating in color, both non-unique and rare weapons have a bland-looking "Kubara" version that usually has worse stats, but offers larger grind bonuses.
 * zOMG! is a prime offender.
 * Most fluffs are recolors and/or upscales of one another with minor details changed.
 * Kat's Kokeshi Doll and the Kokeshi Collectibles are palette swaps of normal Kokeshi Dolls.
 * Gift Boxes from the 2008 Christmas event were Christmas-themed recolors of Flying Giftboxes.
 * Lightning Bugs, Shockroaches, and Deathroaches share the same base model.
 * Landstriders are green and black versions of the Walker.
 * Outlaw Wolves are green Outlaw Pups.
 * Heck, it's probably safe to say that half the enemies of the game are palette swaps of a different enemy.
 * Faction ship models in EVE Online are their base ships with different color schemes. This is true of their pirate counterparts as well.
 * City of Heroes makes frequent use of Palette Swapping in uniformed enemy groups such as Arachnos, where different ranks (and sometimes entirely different classes!) of enemies share the same uniform with a modified color scheme. For example, Psychic Fortunatas wear red versions of the normal Night and Blood Widow uniforms. Arbiters (who are the highest ranking members of Arachnos, said to be above even the four Archvillains in terms of authority) wear shiny versions of the Wolf Spider uniform.
 * Also interestingly enough, a player using the Mission Architect can actually palette swap preexisting enemies! Even AVs! And, of course, due to the game's customization system, the vast majority of models use one of three basic animation sets anyway.


 * Dynasty Warriors: online. Given that all mooks on different sides are simply palette swaps of each other, but the custom outfits can also be. You can individually "dye" each item so that they change color, There are three different dyes that give you a unique color for each one. the Weapons also change color when you add an innate element to it. They will take on a basic color for the element, but other colors on more complex looking weapons will change to fit the theme of the main color (like gold might change to silver). You have ice (blue and silver), fire (red and gold), wind (green and silver), Lightning (yellow and bronze), vorpal (purple and bronze).
 * RuneScape Classic used this trope: the game environment was 3d but the enemies were 2D sprites, so enemies such as "thief" "man" and "farmer" were often simply palette swaps of one another. Also, the customizable player character models could be considered this as well.

Platform Game

 * In Super Mario Bros., Red Koopa Troopas are smart enough to turn around when they come to a ledge, while Green ones walk right off, even into a Bottomless Pits.
 * Mario's brother Luigi also began life as no more than a palette swap, but he later evolved into the taller, thinner look that he is known for when the Japanese game Doki Doki Panic was ported to the west as Super Mario Bros. 2. This differentiation between Mario and Luigi has stuck ever since, as did the alteration of their shirt and overall colours (switching in SMB2 from red/green overalls and blue shirts to the more natural blue overalls and red/green shirts).
 * This was parodied in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door: Mario could change his shirt and hat color to green by wearing the L Emblem badge. Despite this being the only change, the president of the Luigi Fan Club (and no one else ) can be fooled when Mario uses this badge. In fact, this is how you solve one of the troubles.
 * A more subtle joke lets you get Waluigi's purple colors by mixing the L badge with the W badge (which normally gave you Wario's colors).
 * In Super Mario Bros. 2, similar to the Koopa Troopas of SMB fame, there are actually two colors of Shy Guy, although the two colors are closer. The difference is exactly the same: Shy Guys in pink turn around when they hit edges; Shy Guys in red walk right off. The three kinds of Birdo have more strikingly different colors, and they indicate what they spit: eggs only, fireballs only, or both. Snifits come in even more colors with a wider variety of behavior, from walking off of cliffs to turning back to spontaneously changing directions to jumping and firing more rapidly. Also, the flicker of damaged enemies or things about to explode changes based on what character you're using.
 * The flicker changing colours by character choice is because all sprites on an NES screen can only make use of one of four sets of three colours (chosen from a palette of 53). In most games, the player character gets one of these sets, and in SMB2, each player character uses a unique colour set. But since you don't want enemies changing colour based on which character you're playing, that only leaves 3 sets left for every single other sprite, which includes vegetables and pretty much anything else that has to move around the screen. You can't change the colour scheme assigned to the enemy without changing all other enemies and whatnots using that colour choice, but you can switch that particular enemy's sprite to one of the other colour sets, and the player character's colour set is about the only one that's at all predictable.
 * Also in Super Mario Bros., the graphic used for the bushes is simply a recolour of the one used for the clouds.
 * Also also, the 1up Mushroom was a Super Mushroom with different-colored cap and spots. Although this was the case with the Poison Mushroom in the original version of Super Mario Bros the Lost Levels (which was only released outside of Japan via the Virtual Console), it gained a more distinct appearance in later versions of the game to make the game slightly less frustrating.
 * Additionally, the darker effect for the underground levels is achieved by Palette Swapping everything, including the enemies, with the Goombas' blueish appearance being the basis of the appearance of the Gloomba line of enemies in the Paper Mario games, which also appear underground.
 * Paper Mario had different colors of Shy Guys seemingly just for variety; however, most color changes in enemies do indicate an increase in difficulty. Red and Blue Goomba, the minibosses for the Prolouge, have slightly different HP, for example.
 * Fire Mario is a palette swap, and star power switches through palettes rapidly.
 * Super Mario Bros 3 had brown Paragoombas that hopped along the ground, and tan Paragoombas that actually flew around, dropping Microgoombas. Gold Cheep-Cheeps and green Parabeetles were among the Dummied Out enemies.
 * Super Mario World expanded on this by giving us four colors of Koopa. The original two colors retained their behaviors, while Blue and Yellow were a little different. Take note that a Koopa wears shoes that correspond to their shell color, which can change if a Koopa enters a different colored shell. Additionally, while Yoshi had a shell in his mouth that was a different color than green, he would have a certain power. We also see different colored Yoshis right off the bat. Yoshis other than green ones add the corresponding shell color's power as long as they have shells in their mouths, so you could actually have two at once.
 * Don't forget about these: a Koopa climbing into a Yellow Shell would become a multicolored color-flashing and invincible resilient Koopa that relentlessly chases you down, and a Koopa stomped out of a Blue Shell would become a shell-kicker. The caped-and-flying Koopas are from red, green, and blue shells.
 * Lampshaded by Cranky Kong in the Game Boy Advance version of Donkey Kong Country, after a boss battle with "Really Gnawty", a recolored version of the first boss, "Very Gnawty", which is itself a big version of a normal enemy called "Gnawty". The quote at the top of the page comes from after defeating Master Necky Sr., a palette swap of Master Necky Jr.
 * In the SNES version of Donkey Kong Country 3, there was a hidden code to give Kiddy and Dixie Kong different colored clothing. It didn't affect the game, but the alternate colors looked cooler than the regular colors.
 * This is used heavily in the TurboGrafx16 game Dragon's Curse, where eventually you will run into three colors - red, green, and blue - of every enemy in the game.
 * Several of the Metroid games have enemies who are color swaps of each other, though Super Metroid mixed it up by making some common enemies larger instead.
 * The Metroid Prime series used this fairly often. For example, the Phaz-Ing in 3 are reskins of the Inglets in 2, the Mechlopses in 2 are reskins of the Triclopses in 1, 2 used reskins to create "Dark" versions of many enemies, and so on. In a somewhat odd aversion, the Bombus from 1 were reused as Luminoth drones in 2 with no changes to appearance and only the most minor alterations to activity.
 * Although the Phaz-Ing can be seen as a continuity nod, seeing as how both Metroid Prime and Emperor Ing were leviathan guardians descended from the same planet.
 * Even the weapons get this; the Ice Beam and Plasma Beam in Prime show up in Echoes slightly reskinned as the Dark Beam and Light Beam, respectively. The scan for the Metroids in Echoes even mentions that they're vulnerable to the "freezing effects" of the Dark Beam.
 * Kirby Super Star uses different palettes for the Helpers and their enemy counterparts (with the exception of Wheelie). Of note is that the Helpers' colors are in fact their standard palettes as Mooks in other Kirby games. Milky Way Wishes adds a third palette to most (all?) enemies, and the Helper to Hero mode in Kirby Super Star Ultra adds a fourth to their playable versions.
 * Several of the bosses reappear under different palettes, as well, though they aren't acknowledged as different bosses.
 * Not to mention Amazing Mirror, where you get three palette-swapped helpers and the ability to change your color. You can change colors in Squeak Squad as well.
 * Many of Kirby's hats for his copy abilities are palette swaps of each other, including bandannas, backwards baseball caps, and crowns.
 * Blinx: The Time Sweeper does this with at least two pairs of bosses. In one, the first monster is yellow; later, you face an identical red counterpart.
 * Averted by the main characters in the arcade versions of Contra and Super Contra, which used different sprites for Bill and Lance (Bill wore a white tank top, while Lance was shirtless). Due to hardware limitations of the NES, their versions of both games used the same sprite for Bill and Lance, changing only the color of their pants, making Bill the "blue guy" and Lance the "red guy". Oddly enough, Contra III: The Alien Wars for the SNES followed this convention as well.
 * In Super C and Contra III, the red colored enemy soldiers are usually the ones who actually shoot their guns.
 * The four main characters in Contra 4 (Bill and Lance, and their "counterparts", Mad Dog and Scorpion) are all palette swaps of the same sprite, with no real playing differences between them. This was due to a 4-Players Mode that was Dummied Out from the final version of the game. The extra characters (Probotector, Sheena, Lucia, Jimbo/Sully) all happen to have four selectable color palettes each as well.
 * The character running sprite from the Sonic the Hedgehog 2 Special Stage is the same no matter if you're playing as Sonic, Tails, or Knuckles when locked-on to Sonic and Knuckles. Only the head (and Tails' titular appendages) are changed - the body is palette swapped.
 * Purple reuses enemy sprites with different colours and gives them different behaviour.
 * Mega Man's Variable Weapon System allows him to adopt enemies' powers along with a new color scheme.
 * Spyro The Dragon provides a 3D example. About midway through the game, Spyro encounters wizard enemies that shoot lightning bolts and wear green robes. Later on in the game, he encounters the same exact enemy model, except these wizards have blue robes and the additional ability to animate suits of armor.

Real Time Strategy

 * As noted above, the Warcraft franchise does this a lot, particularly World of Warcraft, which is notorious for reusing character models and animations. Although it's understandable why a polar bear would share the same model as a grizzly bear, it's slightly jarring when you encounter a boss like Murmur who is clearly a copy of Ragnaros with only minor changes.
 * Even in the RTS games, some units share the same model as another one. Like how a tinted Acolyte model was used for a "Fallen Priest" and "Heretic" in the Orc campaign for Reign of Chaos. But some are more subtle like how Harpies use a modified Gargoyle model.
 * If you lacked 3D rendering skills, this was what you were reduced to doing for custom maps with custom creeps in Warcraft 3's World Editor. The game itself gave you some flexiblity in changing their sizes and tinting them different colors, but apart from that you had to work with what was shipped.
 * A common example of palette swaps in Real Time Strategy games is the team color of units.
 * In Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun and Red Alert 2, the 3D models of each units used a palette with some "remap" colors, which were assigned to the team colors. The rest of the palette didn't change.
 * The entire franchise does that, and the first two games had unit sprites in common.
 * The first two games made no attempt at a distinction between the basic infantry and some of the buildings. This even carried over games, as the Soviets had pretty much the same tanks and infantry as GDI, except they were red as opposed to yellow. The Allies and Nod had some tiny variations, since they changed the sizes of some of the tanks to differentiate them, but otherwise the Allies was a palette swap of Nod.
 * In the StarCraft campaign, special units were often assigned a different team color so the player could tell them apart from their normal counterparts. Only Kerrigan in her Zerg form had a completely unique character model.
 * Incidentally, the way this was done (put the "hero" unit on another team and set that team/unit to "rescuable" status, meaning that you gain control of it when you get close enough to it, then put it right next to your starting units) also led to the unit's appearance being accompanied by a short audio jingle, as if to say, "I'm important, so don't go getting me killed, kthx".
 * Star Wars: Empire at War: Forces of Corruption example: Grand Admiral Thrawn's flagship, the Admonitor, is a blue version of the Accuser, Captain Piett's ship from the original Empire at War, but with a different special (all Star Destroyers have a tractor beam special).
 * Sacrifice has five sides with 9 unique units each. A few of these 'unique' units are palette swaps though. Although the manual actually explains all of them. Some are the same creatures that defected to the other side, and were granted different powers by their new god. Or were killed by Charnel and raised as The Undead.

Rhythm Game

 * Most characters in pop'n music have palette swaps that can be selected by pressing a yellow button on the character select screen. Sometimes the character's palette-swapped form takes on a different name (i.e. Vic Viper's swap is called Lord British), and sometimes you'll get a different character altogether.
 * Dance Dance Revolution character dancer's outfits are palette swaps of each other. In Hottest Party 1, and each new character introduced in Hottest Party 2-3, gets 1 outfit in four colors. I don't know if the PlayStation 2 characters outfit's do the same thing, but it's possible. One palette can make a character look great. Some, on the other hand... http://www.konami.jp/bemani/ddr/jp/gs/hp/basic/chara.html# (hint, hover over Rena's yellow outfit. ick. her green one is ick too.)

Roguelike

 * Roguelike games such as Nethack use standard ASCII characters in place of actual graphics, so using different colors is the only way to have a large number of distinguishable objects or creatures.

Role Playing Game

 * Mario & Luigi
 * Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga mainly did this to identify a handful of monsters that had the same name or moveset: One that was regularly colored and a "dark" variant that was a little bit stronger than the original ones.
 * Mario & Luigi: Partners In Time had a similar motif with Superstar Saga, but there's also a golden version of the Koopleon that gave out an lot of money and the Shroobs had a new color scheme for virtually every area.
 * Mario & Luigi: Dream Team marks their stronger recolors with an "R" in their names.
 * Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam is a little bit more subtle than the previous installments by giving the stronger Shiny Paper enemies a sparkling texture as opposed to just giving them an entirely new color scheme.
 * The Final Fantasy games feature a lot of these, including Underground Monkeys. Perhaps the most noticeable example is Final Fantasy X's Monster Arena, where all the bonus monsters are simply previous enemies and bosses colored differently (save for Neslug).
 * Final Fantasy VIII is just about the only game that does not use palette swaps in copious quantities, and even that game has Ultima/Omega Weapon and Elnoyle/Elvoret as swaps.
 * Justified in that
 * FFVIII was the only game not to actually need this because the monsters leveled up with you. The other games had to make palette swaps from necessity.
 * Final Fantasy IX had just about as little of it as possible too. The only palette monsters are the friendly monsters, the black waltzes and the crystal versions of the four chaos bosses. Mind you, while the -enemies- were almost all unique, the NPCs could be another story (though they too were often more varied than expected).
 * Final Fantasy X-2 at least tries some mild deviation, by making its palette swapped baddies progressively bigger.
 * Although the game still suffered this trope for a few enemies, including the Final Boss; the final boss is basically a copy of the main character from Final Fantasy X in different clothes and uses the exact same battle animations, right down to his critical HP and KO animations!
 * Final Fantasy XII still uses Palette Swaps, but rely on them a lot less than the past games did. For example, dragons and wolves will still come in different colors, but will also have other features added to make them different from their weaker counterparts, such as spikes on the skull, sport flaming eyes, being larger than the previous monsters, etc. However, the animations are still recycled for all monsters that are in the same family tree.
 * Somewhat justified in that FFXII mentions migration and evolution of creatures occasionally. It likely got this from Final Fantasy XI, which has similar explanations for why monsters of the same family had such bizarre separations across environments. On the other hand, FFXI barely even uses palette swaps; including many 'Bosses' (rare monsters referred to as NM, although mostly not storyline related) using the same sprites as the regular mobs that surround them (although occasionally with an inflated size). This was particularly bad where, for quite awhile after they were introduced, five of the most powerful monsters in the game (at the time of their release) used the same models as far more mundane creatures. They've since been reskinned, but still use the same base models.
 * In Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings, all the regular summons (bar the ones like Levianthan, Ifrit, and so on), are palette swaps of each other, so that like the above example the player can tell them apart.
 * Another Squaresoft RPG, Chrono Trigger, was brutally honest about its use of palette swapped enemies. The imps that you fight early in the game are named "Blue Imp" and "Green Imp" respectively, and the bestiary in the DS version differentiate between the two versions of the "Hench" monster by designating them (Blue) and (Purple). Other palette swapped enemies are given unique names, however.
 * Kingdom of Paradise's field enemies consist merely of differently-colored versions of a few models (archer, swordsman, golem). The color of the uniform lets the player know which clan they're from.
 * MOTHER did this, but had the decency to occasionally add subtle changes to their swapped sprites (a dog-collar on the wolf sprite to make a 'stray dog', rust marks on the robot sprite to make the 'scrapper'...)
 * EarthBound parodied this by giving the palette swaps goofy names.
 * Monster Hunter uses Palette Swaps to differentiate standard wyverns from their upgrades. For example, a low level Rathalos is Red, a medium powered one dark blue, and a high level one silver.
 * Some of them have distinct fighting styles though.
 * Tales of Legendia is a big offender. The same twelve enemies appear constantly throughout the game, sometimes twice in the same dungeon, with only their palettes swapped out. This gets ridiculous within the first ten hours of the game, but in a seventy hour game, it begins to feel incredibly monotonous.
 * Mega Man Battle Network uses this a lot - while there are numerous viruses over the six games, each has three to four different palette swaps, e.g. Mettaur, Mettaur2, Mettaur3, and MettaurOmega, just to name one set. Third-level and Omega viruses often have slightly changed attacks, but for the most part, the only difference is increased HP and damage output.
 * While Pokémon avoids doing this with their own Mons (with the possible exception of Plusle and Minun, who are palette swaps of each other on purpose), the anime likes to reuse trainer designs they've already done, including an audience for Contests.
 * Although a special mention should be made for Shiny Pokemon, which are rare palette swapped variants.
 * A particularly interesting use of this trope is Hippowdon. The male sprite is light brown while the female sprite is dark grey, mirroring real life colour differences between males and females of various animals.
 * Backlash ensued when in Gen V, the Kami trio turned out to mostly be this. (There are some minor differences in the tail, but essentially they are Palette Swaps of each other.)
 * Which is really odd when you consider that the Lake Trio in Gen IV were even more similar to each other (physically only different in the shape and color of their "hair" and the state of their eyes; they even all share the same elemental type) and yet did not recieve nearly the same amount of ire from the fandom. Of course it may be that the rage was always there, and the Kamis made it boil over.
 * The standard editions of the Kingdom Hearts games mostly avoid this (surprising for a Square Enix game), only using palette swaps to denote the elemental affinity of the mage-type Heartless; however, the Final Mix editions of both games use palette swaps in interesting ways. First of all, nearly all of the standard Mooks in the Final Mix games have had their colors changed from the original game's colors—for example, the first game's purple and pink Wyverns became blue and gold in the original Final Mix, and the second game's blue Hook Bats became red in Final Mix+. Some enemies, such as the black Shadows, remained the same in all editions, and though there was a rumor that the palette-swapped standard enemies had their stats tweaked, they really are the same enemies. The Final Mix editions of the game also included extra monsters; of these, many of them are palette swaps of standard enemies with slight changes in the mesh, high stats, and a host of annoying special abilities.
 * This isn't the case in 358/2 Days. Most of the bosses are larger palette swaps of average heartless you fight normally, with a few other minor aesthetic alterations. Also, some of the Keyblades are palette swaps of each other, and when . Though this could be justified considering this is a DS game and they focused on putting the good stuff in other areas. Which they did pretty well.
 * Also from Days: is a Palette Swap of Roxas.
 * The 7th Saga has the infamously Genre Savvy Bounty Hunter Pison, who, after begin defeated the first time, shows up unexpectedly later in the quest and proudly announces that he is now Red-Pison. Turns out to be Exactly What It Says on the Tin, and you immediately fight a stronger version of the original enemy, now palette-swapped to red. He even does this again even later on, becoming Metal-Pison and getting a gunmetal gray recolor.
 * The World Ends With You does this with the Noise. There are sometimes cosmetic differences between the various versions of each Noise species, and the boss versions of a few of the more powerful versions often have tattoos all over their bodies in addition to more threatening characteristics (bigger horns/tusks), but overall most Noise are palette swaps of about fifteen or sixteen different species.
 * Sword of Vermilion was a heavy offender from the 16-bit era. All the common enemies came in six different colors (in order of ascending power: green, blue, red, black, silver, gold). Also, only the Final Boss was truly unique, all other bosses were palette swaps of four different models (dragon, giant, fire demon and necromancer).
 * In Jade Cocoon 2, some Divine Beasts come in multiple elemental varieties. For example, Mau Divine Beasts come in Fire, Wind and Earth varieties, each with their own stats and attacks, but not Water because it is the opposite to the Mau family's main element, Fire.
 * The Persona games make use of this. All enemies in 3 and 4, even bosses, save for the plot related ones, are palette swaps of their base-type.
 * The earlier Shin Megami Tensei games loved to do this. The most notorious example? The three seraphs' sprite when they are in your party is the same as the archangel's: the second demon of the "divine" clan.
 * In .hack//G.U., Atoli and Shino are palette swaps. Of course, this is easier to understand when you remember that this takes place in an MMORPG; that, and the fact that they look the same is a major plot point. Also, all the NPCs running around "The World" consist of palette swaps.
 * The various enemies in Shining in the Darkness.
 * The various Phantasy Star games have used this. The first Phantasy Star had one notable (for an ancient 8-bit game) detail: the skeleton-type enemies had a different shield design for all three of their swaps.
 * The Uderfrykte Matron in The Elder Scrolls : Oblivion is just an extra-strong troll with a blurry shader applied to it.
 * Shining the Holy Ark was really bad with this, to the point where simliar looking enemies would reappear in the dungeon after the next. It was probably because they were all heavily animated (for the time) so the game couldn't physically have as many enemies.

Shoot Em Up

 * Yar's Revenge does this quite oddly. The Quotile constantly palette swaps as part of its normal function, going through a rainbow of the colors that the 2600 could produce. When it turns red, it becomes a Swirl and tries to kill you. On later levels, if the normally red shield around the Quotile is blue, the Quotile will turn into Swirls when it turns blue and yellow as well. Of course, the original red Swirl is faster and usually trickier to avoid/kill.
 * Hardcore fans of the Gradius series were disappointed to discover that in Gradius V, the Player 2 ship was not Lord British (the red, single-nosed 2P ship of Life Force), but just a red-colored Vic Viper.
 * One of the final bosses in Darius Gaiden is a palette swap of the first boss, making for a nasty trick for any unprepared player.
 * Galaxian was the first game to have palette-swapped enemies where sprites were multi-colored. In fact, this is the oldest game to have multi-colored sprites.
 * Super Spy Hunter has you fight upgraded palette swaps of the second and fourth bosses prior to the final boss.
 * Raizing's "Bat" series of shmups does this differently. Pressing certain buttons or button combos not only changes the palette of player ships, but also gives them different abilities, such as enhanced speed, bomb, shot and option firepower, and in some cases, a smaller hitbox.
 * The Guardian Legend does this with bosses Fleepa, Optomon and Clawbot, each of which recurs in different colors.

Simulation Game

 * In the Super NES ports of Wing Commander and Wing Commander: The Secret Missions, the Jalthi was a color-swapped version of the Salthi model, due to storage limitations of the cartridge.
 * In Descent and Descent II, some enemy robots would have textures that looked like textures found within the games' walls or floors. Although some were for camouflage, some 'bots had their textures changed to denote different behavior (such as dropping bombs, instead of firing laser or missiles or what-have-you).
 * Red Medium Hulks are three times tougher than Brown Medium Hulks, and use homing missiles, in barrages, nonetheless. Class 2 Platforms have a green Demonic Spider variation that shoots rapid-fire concussion missiles. Play In Descent II, the goddamned Red Hornets later have a more demonic green variant, the Spawns.
 * Harvest Moon Grand Bazaar was really lazy with this in comparison to the rest of the series. While the other games will use palette swaps for minor characters and other insignificant things (items, animals, etc.), a lot of the major townspeople in Grand Bazaar share sprites with at least one other villager. The two main character choices (a male and a female) are just swaps of each other. Claire shares the same sprite with Nellie, and Isaac with Wilbur; Cindy with Lauren (justified, because they're twins), along with every other young girl (including your daughter); Kevin with all other young boys (including your son); Ethel with Joan; and Raul with Diego and Enrique (they're all brothers). They at least get somewhat different Character Portraits, but because of this they wear really similar clothing in their artwork.

Sports Game

 * In Punch-Out!!, each of the boxers (except King Hippo) has a swapped counterpart with a different face:
 * The arcade version has Glass Joe and Kid Quick, Piston Hurricane and Pizza Pasta, and Bald Bull and Mr. Sandman.
 * The NES version has Glass Joe and Don Flamenco, Von Kaiser and Great Tiger, Bald Bull and Mr. Sandman (returning from the arcade game), Vodka Drunkenski / Soda Popinski and Super Macho Man (returning from the arcade sequel Super Punch-Out), and Piston Honda and Mike Tyson / Mr. Dream.
 * This virtually happens in all Punch-Out games, save for the Wii game, in which for the first time, all of the characters have distinct character models, although they still have similar appearances, indirectly referencing this trope.
 * In Backyard Skateboarding, is a palette swap of Andy MacDonald.

Turn Based Strategy

 * Nono from Final Fantasy Tactics Advance wears a green version of his job class, the Gadgeteer's clothes.
 * All generic units, enemy and ally, in the Final Fantasy Tactics series are color swaps of each other so players can identify units from each other. Example, a Nu Mou Black Mage is generally clothed in blue while an enemy one has red clothing.
 * This makes things moderately confusing when you have to fight Blue Mages dressed in red and Red Mages dressed in blue.
 * In tactics A2 this becomes funny. The red king is dressed in blue, the blue king is dressed in red, the the black king is dressed in red, the green king is dressed in purple. not only that, they arn't master of their namesake magic, they use others more. So apparently magic type can get palette swapped as well.
 * Almost all of the non-plot-related enemies and characters in Disgaea have higher class ranks that are palette swaps of their base class, each with slightly better stats than the last.
 * 3 introduces a service that allows one to change a unit's color to that of any of their other creatable ranks for a fee, and 4 expands on it by introducing unique colors that aren't used by any of a class' ranks, and extends the palette swapping privileges to unique characters.
 * A similar effect is seen in most other Nippon Ichi titles, including La Pucelle and Makai Kingdom. Phantom Brave did it with the titles attached to characters instead of classes.
 * The Fire Emblem series plays this in several different ways:
 * There is usually just one or two (if both genders are possible) character model per class; everyone in a particular class is a palette swap of that model. Generic units are coloured by affiliation, while playable, boss and other important characters have their own unique colour scheme. Some characters have their own individual class (e.g. Lord) and thus look unique. Radiant Dawn alleviates this to some extent by giving every player and important character a unique skin to their model which reflects their actual appearance, but the model's animations do not change at all. That is why the fans clamor for the official character art—these portraits tend to add a touch of personalization that the in-game models often do not portray.
 * Several exceptions exist to this tendency, particularly in the GBA era. The Sacred Stones introduced three apprentice classes; there is only one character each that as such looks rather unique... until he/she promotes into a proper class. Blazing Sword's Hawkeye - comparatively not that important a character - has his own completely unique Berserker sprite which differs significantly from the normal in its movement, whereas all other Berserkers use the generic sprite. Weird.
 * Boss portraits are perhaps the more obvious example of this trope in the series, as after the NES era it wasn't really an acceptable break from reality based on technical constraints, unlike everyone's battle sprites being identical. The older the game, the more likely you'll run into a lookalike boss with a random palette. Jugdral is most notorious for this since it was done with semi-important villains, though Akaneia was even worse. After Sword of Seals, which memorably had six palette swaps of the same boss character all as the bosses of the same chapter, the practice waned through the rest of the handheld games before finally ending for good in Tellius.
 * Age of Wonders, very few fabric units (Larva-Maggot, Gold-Black Dragon) and most modded units.
 * Surprisingly for a game of its complexity, Jagged Alliance 2 has this. All enemies, mercs and militia are basically the same 3 models (Big Male, Regular Male, and Female) with a different palette for each. Mercs have the most diversity, as each has a different clothing color combination, and of course there are all sorts of combinations for hair color and skin color for everyone in the game.
 * Luminous Arc and its sequel are horrible about this. There are probably less than ten different monster sprites that are recolored to make all the generic enemies you face.
 * Heroes of Might and Magic suffers from a bad case of palette swapping when units upgrade. Granted, some bells and whistles are usually added, but it's painfully obvious the models were built from the same sprite.
 * This is possibly a Justified Trope since upgraded units are supposedly the same units as pre-upgrade.
 * The economic edutainment game MULE does this with the players' characters if any of them are the same species, but since they only share the screen during auctions, it's not really a problem.
 * Shining Force III does a pretty good job of subverting this, until around half way when you notice the earliest monsters reappearing but with a different colour. The humble bat, one of the earliest enemies, reappears in Chapter 4 as the Vampire Bat which is bright red.
 * Shining Force III does a pretty good job of subverting this, until around half way when you notice the earliest monsters reappearing but with a different colour. The humble bat, one of the earliest enemies, reappears in Chapter 4 as the Vampire Bat which is bright red.

Wide Open Sandbox

 * Prototype has both lighter-colored USMC and darker-colored Blackwatch palettes of military vehicles, the ones you can actually hijack. Blackwatch ground vehicles are tougher to kill while their aircraft carry more ammunition(and are also slightly tougher), than their Marine counterparts. They can also be easily identified with their respective logos too.
 * Also the civilian populace, where any given civilian model has a few color themes affecting attire and skin.

Anime and Manga

 * Common throughout the Digimon franchise; though it has well over one thousand Mons, it is slightly padded with palette swaps:
 * Perhaps the most understandable examples are the Evil Counterpart palette swaps, darker versions of certain heroic Digimon. The most prominent example, both in the anime and otherwise, is Digimon Adventure 02's BlackWarGreymon, whose contrast with the actual WarGreymon was played up for all it was worth.
 * Sometimes, the difference in color is used to denote a variant of a different level, attribute type, or associated with different elements/powers. For example, Otamamon's has water powers and is of the Virus attribute, while Otamamon Red is associated with fire and is of the Data attribute. Both are of the Child level. On the other hand, sometimes there are less reasonable instances: there's Monochromon, an Adult, and Vermillimon, a red Monochromon of the Perfect level. There are many more examples.
 * Digimon World is horrible about doing this to differentiate random enemy Digimon from recruitable ones. You can recruit Betamon and Drimogemon (frog and drill-nosed mole, basically). You fight ModokiBetamon and NiseDrimogemon. (Modoki means 'seems like' or 'looks like;' Nise means 'false.') The only difference at all between them is that ModokiBetamon is a slightly different shade of green and NiseDrimogemon has a mustache instead of whiskers.
 * If they're bad, Soulmon is worse. The only difference between him and Bakemon would be a pointy sorcerer's hat.
 * Not as bad as Gottsumon, a Child-level Golem Digimon who has two palette swaps, Icemon and Insekimon. At least Icemon (Adult-level) is clearly white as opposed to Gottsumon's grey so you can easily tell them apart, but Insekimon is distinguished from Gottsumon and Icemon solely by being a slightly lighter shade of grey with a green tinge, and what really takes the cake is that he is a Perfect. You heard correctly, a Perfect is a palette swap of a Child. This was lampshaded neatly in Digimon Savers - when Gottsumon evolves to Insekimon, Yoshino comments that all that seems to have changed is his colour.
 * Gururumon has to be Bandai poking fun at themselves over this practice. The difference between Garurumon and Gururumon is that Gururumon's blue stripes are slightly more purplish in hue; I dare you to tell them apart if you don't have their pictures/trading cards side by side. Many are the fans who thought that "Gururumon" was just a typo.
 * There's also ClearAgumon, which is basically a transparent ToyAgumon! Incidentally, they also have an Evil Counterpart palette swap.
 * Vegimon has two palette swaps: Zassoumon and RedVegimon. RedVegimon, at least, has the decency to differ in design somewhat insofar as having large clubs at the end of its tentacles instead, but otherwise it just looks like a Vegimon that is blue.
 * Digimon Xros Wars: The Young Hunters Leaping Through Time marks the debut of such a Palette Swap as a main character in the anime - Ryouma Mogami's partner is Psychemon, a rather garish Palette Swap of a particularly famous former main character, Gabumon.
 * The third kind is random recolourings which serve no purpose at all, are given little to no context, are not differentiated from the main Digimon at all, and seem to be there for the hell of it. Digimon World 3 is a massive offender in this regard. The entire Amaterasu Server (before you free it) is a Dark World-themed palette swap of the Asuka Server, and most of the Digimon in it are palette swaps of the ones from Asuka.
 * The Koubu mecha in the first Sakura Taisen games are identical aside from color. The second game added another set of sprites for the two characters with European designed mecha. Once the games entered 3D with the third game, each characters mecha became more individualized with unique emblems, animations, and weapon models.
 * C the Money And Soul of Possibility has several facets of one basic design.
 * The "Rose Bride dress" of Revolutionary Girl Utena: The original dress is red and worn by Anthy during the duels. In the first ending sequence, Utena wears a light pink version of the dress, and in the third story arc, Kozue and Shiori gain dresses that match their hair colors (indigo and purple, respectively).
 * During Yu-Gi-Oh!'s DOMA Arc, Jonouchi / Joey adds the Blue Flame Swordsman to his arsenal. This is, unsurprisingly, Exactly What It Says on the Tin—a blue Palette Swap of his already existing card, Flame Swordsman, with the exact same stat (ATK: 1800, DEF: 1600, Level: 5). On the plus side it does have a useful ability that the original card does not possess—when it's sent to the Graveyard it allows Joey to summon a regular Flame Swordsman to take its place.
 * Strong the Budo seems to be a palette swap of Big the Budo in Kinnikuman. They even share the same voice actor in Kinnikuman: Muscle Fight. In reality, because he's a way for  to impersonate Strong the Budo.

Comic Books

 * In Ultimate Comics: Avengers, Gregory Stark is introduced as Tony's twin brother. He has blonde hair and wears white suits.

Film

 * The movie Grandma's Boy, which is about video game designers, references this tendency when one tester recommends differentiating between two types of enemies by changing the colors of one of them.
 * Brad and Janet's guest rooms in The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Lampshaded by an audience call-out ("same room, different lighting, cheap movie!")

Live-Action TV
""The first woman with the groceries was exiting a library that doesn't allow snacks. I know this because we've tried on several occasions. And the second woman was simply a replica of the first woman, but they painted her face brown, which is both offensive and suspicious.""
 * The newer series of Kamen Rider have tended to reuse the same rubber suits for their Monster of the Week, with the differences ranging from a complete repaint to a differently coloured scarf. Sometimes this is given a lampshade, as in Kamen Rider Agito where monsters embody members of certain animal genera (and thus Agito fights three recolored jaguar monsters in the first two episodes). Considering that the cost of creating one of these expensive monster costumes from scratch greatly outweighs the cost of a simple repaint, it's more due to budget constraints rather than a lack of creativity. Some Kamen Riders also fall prey to the budget-saving repaint: most of the movie-only Riders, Evil Twin Ryuga from Kamen Rider Ryuki, the Super Prototype Hopper Riders and Evil Twin Dark Kabuto from Kamen Rider Kabuto and Zeronos' Deadly Upgrade Zero Form from Kamen Rider Den-O.
 * In Tokusou Sentai Dekaranger and Power Rangers SPD, Make My Monster Grow mostly took the year off, in favor of each alien criminal of the week having his or her own Humongous Mecha. While the monster suits each looked original, the mecha started to repeat themselves, with minor details, and yes, colors, changed. (A few times, there wasn't even a repaint!)) Two once-used monster suits per week was just not gonna happen.
 * The Dark Rangers in Mighty Morphin Power Rangers were simply repainted Putty costumes. They were unimpressive at best.
 * The same thing happens quite frequently in Dinosaurs. Every single puppet not used for a protagonist was used as countless different characters, made male or female simply by changing the clothes.
 * This is the difference in Community episode Physical Education between and his Identical Stranger.
 * In the Psych episode "We'd like to thank the academy", Shawn shoots two civilian cardboard cutouts in a training exercise. His justifications:

Newspaper Comics

 * The Mad Magazine comic Spy vs. Spy features the titular black and white spies, palette swaps of one another.

Table Top Games

 * Miniatures wargames will often have this. The players will actually play the same army by the same rules, but represent in universe alignments by paint scheme. For example, one player may represent the WWII 10th Mountain Division and another may represent a US Ranger Battalion by using the same miniatures and rule set, but simply paint the 10th in snow and the Rangers in drab greens. This is especially prevalent in Warhammer Fantasy Battle and Warhammer 40,000 where many in universe armies might follow the same rule set.

Toys

 * Transformers being what it is frequently redecos (puts different colors and painted designs on an old mold) and/or retools (puts new parts on old models) the same model several times to get better return on their toys. This can vary from a new paint scheme on a character to making a completely different character. Starscream, in particular, shares most of his body with his fellow Seekers, Thundercracker, Skywarp, Sunstorm, and Acid Storm. Move some things around (retool) and you get the 'coneheads,' Thrust, Dirge, and Ramjet. Even Optimus Prime gets reused as a different guy from time to time. Original Ultra Magnus? Totally a Prime repaint with a different trailer. Magnus' robot mode is actually the toy's Super Mode - the toy's normal robot mode is never shown to avoid confusion. And then, of course, there are all the 'evil' repaints, such as Scourge (repaint of different series' Prime toy) and the various incarnations of Nemesis Prime (Scourge color scheme added to other Optimuses... Optimi?) There's even a Nemesis Breaker, an Evil Twin of Leobreaker from Transformers Cybertron.
 * Transformers Cybertron interestingly avoids this, for the most part (okay, not in the toyline), with Thundercracker having a standard Seeker body... but Starscream himself is a completely different design, with only the head looking particularly Starscreamy. (It's actually based on Screamer's pre-Earth design from the War Within comics.) The exception is Galvatron. After upgrading to Galvatron, visually, Megatron is Palette Swapped to G1 Megatron's colours. Major Homage, bordering on non-sexual Fan Service.
 * Also averted with Hot Shot, Red Alert, and Scattorshot's upgrades, which are completely different from their original forms.
 * Averted in Beast Wars itself. Despite their toys being palette swaps, Tigatron and Cheetor's character models (in both beast and robot modes) are altered to make them look less alike. This is also true of Tarantulas and Blackarachnia.
 * Additionally averted in the live-action film series. A character named "Frenzy" appears with no "Rumble" in sight, (G1 Frenzy and Rumble being a source of much confusion within the fandom) and Prowl was axed because there was already a Decepticon police car (Barricade) and they didn't want the audience to be confused (presumably, this means Prowl's palette swaps, Bluestreak and Smokescreen won't appear either). But with Barricade suddenly gone...
 * The toy line for the Transformers movies plays it straight, though. Several characters are repaints of older figures, and others simply get a new paint job for a re-release. This at least allows them to reuse some molds of otherwise 'dead' characters, see Jazz redecoed as Smokescreen (also answering the entry above). Or their 'replacements', a running theory is that Grindor is actually a zombified version of Blackout.
 * An eregorious example would be Beast Wars II, where all characters but 3 new molds and at least 2 who did not have toys, were this.
 * Actually lampshaded and justified in Transformers Prime, where Skyquake and Dreadwing are explained as twins with two halves of the same spark, explaining why they look essentially the same, just with different colors.
 * Also justified in Transformers Animated, there they were explained as having the same "body type" in-fiction. Oddly, though, only a handful of toys actually got recolored, namely Starscream as his clones and a couple of Bot Con exclusives. More recolors came out in Japan or were cancelled before release.
 * G.I. Joe has several 'covered head to toe' enemy characters. Each meant to be a different mook an identical uniform. Swaps come as ideas do. The 'Python Patrol' was, storywise, a way to make characters invisible to sensor equipment. The heroes had, for example, 'Tiger Force', which swapped the usual uniform colors with yellow, brown and red. Nameless Joe Greenshirts (think 'redshirts') got this, though their heads were clearly seen. Some were logical (light skin and a tanned one could mean a sibling was in the sun) but others were different races, same facial features.
 * Nearly every LEGO minifigure ever, if for fairly understandable reasons. It's only within the past few years that they've started implementing unique body, limb and head designs for non-human characters.
 * In Bionicle, the act of palette swapping represented a very disliked trend throughout the line's early run, commonly known as "clone sets". The most infamous case is that of the Bohrok and Bohrok-Kal lines: 12 sets that, beyond their weapons (and usually their collectibles), are exactly the same model, just in different colors. The same could be said for most of the Matoran sets, which only differed in their colors and/or mask designs. Yet narrowly avoided by most of the original Rahi two-packs which had two almost identical models, but each had at least one tiny detail that differentiated it from its partner (the exception being the Nui-Jaga scorpions). Outside of the toys, story material also had its share of these, but not many were truly canon. The green Vortixx from the comic Shadow Play was colored that way so that the readers could tell him apart from the black Roodaka. On the other hand, Tuma's green colored Rock Steed from Rise and Fall of the Skrall is canon.
 * For its first two waves, Hero Factory dipped right back into the practice for its heroes (the villains still averted this), with the 2.0 wave being a particular standout example. Though heroes are still all built off the same basic frame, the next two waves have done a significantly better job in avoiding this.
 * Not only do the current (as of 2011) line of My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic figurines resemble more toward pre-G4 versions, but various background characters (sometimes not even existing in the ) are palette swaps of the main characters, if their packaging graphic is anything to go by. For instance, look up,      if you're already familiar with the main G4 cast. Some other examples show attempt to differentiate however, such as "Cupcake" being a wingless version of Fluttershy, or "Sunny Daze" being a non-unicorn Sweetie Belle, or even "Minty" as an Applejack mold sans the hat.
 * Nerf blasters are often released in recolored versions as store exclusives, notably the Sonic Series from Toys R Us, the Clear Series from Target, and the legendary Red Strike series from Walmart, which was only for sale for one Black Friday and is now one of the most sought after and expensive repaints ever in Nerf history. Subverted in Walmart's Whiteout series in that they actually improve the blasters' performance.

Web Comics

 * The world of Adventurers! apparently suffers from a severe case of this. The characters get to fight monsters like dark blue spectres and navy blue spectres, each requiring different tactics to defeat. It was also lampshaded in a discussion between the Big Bad and his minion, where the Big Bad complains he has no time because he has to create new monsters to send after the protagonists, and the minion points out he usually just takes an existing monster and puts 'Ice' in front of it's name.
 * In Dragon City, Natasha was a brown version of Erin, but she was later discovered to be an alternate universe version of Erin, so it doesn't really count.
 * In Aventure Dennis the protagonist fights Shadow Dennis a palette swapped version of himself.
 * Homestuck: The Underlings of Sburb are all the same basic few monster species given countless different colours themed after grist types, and all bearing some combination of the attributes of the players' prototypings. Given that it's an ersatz RPG in webcomic form, it's probably a homage to the Palette Swap practice in general.

Web Original

 * The characters in Red vs. Blue look identical except for their unique colors. This is due more to the nature of the work (Machinima using the Halo Color-Coded Multiplayer mode) than a stylistic choice.
 * In later seasons, when the current game in the series allowed for customized pieces of armor, this cleared up a bit.
 * On user-created-adoptable site Squiby it's common for users to take a single format for a creature and use creative colorfills to make multiple versions. Some popular lines that use this formula include Mites, Tencats, Shika and Coons.

Western Animation

 * The villain in the Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo movie summoned several Palette Swapped copies of previously created villains for the final battle.
 * One somewhat bizarre non-Video Game example are Wile E. Coyote and Ralph Wolf. They were basically identical, except Ralph had a red nose and Wile E had a black one, and they lived in different areas.
 * Family Guy:
 * Lois' sister, Carol, is basically another Lois with different hair and clothes. They sport the same exact face and body shape.
 * Many extras on SpongeBob SquarePants are Palette Swaps of each other. For example, the My Leg and Deaugh fishes.
 * Very common for the background ponies in My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic. With the exception of their "cutie marks", most of them are Palette Swaps of each other, and in a few cases such as two of Apple Bloom's classmates, of main/minor characters. There're also the red and green dragons that appear in separate episodes.
 * In the Futurama episode "The Farnsworth Parabox" the crew of Planet Express goes to a Parallel Universe where they meet palette-swapped versions of themselves (Fry has black hair, Bender is gold-plated instead of gray), otherwise nearly identical in personality.
 * In Gargoyles, Owen and Vogel. They say nobody's ever said they look alike..
 * Further, one of the consequences of rapid growing a Gargoyle clone is a change in coloration, which was probably done to avoid the usual narrative consequences thereof.
 * In Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog, in the first episode, Davy Sprocket is purple in the first episode. Davy Sprocket then returned in "The Last Resort," but there is one thing different: he was colored yellow instead of purple.
 * In Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog, in the first episode, Davy Sprocket is purple in the first episode. Davy Sprocket then returned in "The Last Resort," but there is one thing different: he was colored yellow instead of purple.

Puppet Shows

 * A number of Muppets are actually the same puppet with different clothes, hair, and other accessories. The Creature Shop calls them "Anything Muppets." Sesame Street fans reading this will probably not be surprised to learn that the characters Prairie Dawn and Betty Lou, for example, are the same puppet, not to mention Zoe and Rosita.