Place the Keycaps Legend, Size, and Color Matching
Match loose keycaps to the board using printed legends and physical size first, while treating color-set names as a secondary grouping signal.
Read three signals in order
The timestamped mobile gameplay at 05:00 shows a board, loose themed caps and a bottom held-cap tray with visible legends such as letters and modifiers. The selected cap receives an outline. At 40:00, the loose pile contains many colors and sizes while the tray still exposes the currently held legends.
Use this matching order:
- Printed legend: letter, number, punctuation or modifier name.
- Physical size: standard square, wide modifier, long spacebar or another distinctive shape.
- Board position: the empty slot's row and neighboring keys.
- Color/set label: a secondary grouping clue, not the final identity.
The official Roblox listing confirms that the objective is to sort keycaps into a keyboard collection and labels the experience beta.
Separate anchors from ambiguous caps
Place large anchors such as Spacebar, Enter, Backspace, Shift, Tab and Caps Lock when their size and legend clearly match an empty position. Then work through letter and number rows. Leave small punctuation and unfamiliar modifiers in an inspection area until neighboring slots reduce the possibilities.
| Cap signal | Best action |
|---|---|
| Unique wide shape and readable legend | Place against the matching board slot |
| Standard square letter | Match row and neighboring letters |
| Color matches but legend conflicts | Trust the legend and board position |
| Legend hidden by pile overlap | Select it, move to clear ground, then inspect |
| Two similar modifiers | Compare width and the remaining empty slots |
Use color without inventing rarity
The reviewed frames show named color-set text in the interface and many differently colored caps. A color can help identify which pieces visually belong together, but it does not prove rarity, price or a gameplay bonus. The video is silent, so no spoken explanation supports such claims.
Likewise, the official Badges API measures completion of Sorted All Keycaps, not individual color rarity. Keep visual style, completion rate and item rarity as separate concepts.
Resolve the last mismatch
When only a few slots remain, stop moving confirmed rows. Lay uncertain caps on clear ground, keep their legends visible and compare one at a time with the empty board shapes. Check behind large loose caps and near the board edge. Use the held tray to make sure a selected cap was not carried away from the search area.
Record a screenshot and counter before rejoining. A dated frame lets the team tell a true layout update from a cap that was merely hidden, selected or placed in the wrong slot.