Level up Valentine’s Day with our 49 Video Game inspired Valentine Coloring Pages at Crafty Josh. This collection features fun designs inspired by the video games and video game culture.
Dive into this collection, browse through, download and print your perfect video games valentines message to share with someone special.
Tap on the magnifying glass on any image to see a bigger version, or the palette icon to see a color preview. Tap the download link to download your choice of US letter or A4 sized line art PDF file which is easy to print.
Valentine’s Day means different things to different people. For some, it’s dinner reservations and roses. For valentine gamers that may not be in the same city, it’s often a quieter mix of shared screens, inside jokes, and the unspoken agreement that “just one more match” is a valid plan.
Gaming culture has its own way of handling Valentine’s Day, whether you’re playing side by side or online together.
Co-Op Couples
For co-op couples, Valentine’s Day doesn’t need much planning. It might be couch co-op, shared headphones, or two controllers charging overnight like a subtle commitment ceremony. Playing together is already the date.
There’s something quietly satisfying about:
Coordinating strategies without speaking
Knowing when to revive, heal, or cover
Losing together and immediately retrying
It’s teamwork without the small talk.
The Gamer Love Language (It’s Not Flowers)
Valentine's Day Gamers
Gamers may not always express affection with grand gestures, sometimes it’s subtle, practical, and often digital:
Sending in-game items “just because”
Logging on at the same time every night
Sharing resources instead of hoarding them
Waiting to start a mission so someone doesn’t miss it
These things might not look romantic from the outside, but they matter. Time, consistency, and shared experiences carry more weight than scripted Valentine traditions.
Valentine’s Day Without the Pressure
One of the best things about gamer-style Valentine celebrations is how low pressure they are. There’s no requirement to “do Valentine’s Day correctly.” No fixed rules, no expectations to follow a template.
That’s why creative, relaxed activities fit so well.
Some people unwind by playing. Others unwind by making things. And for a lot of gamers, switching gears from screen to something hands-on is surprisingly satisfying — especially when it still connects to gaming culture.
Coloring might not be the first thing people associate with gamers, but that’s changing. For teens and young adults especially, it’s become a genuinely relaxing way to step away from screens without fully disconnecting from the themes they enjoy.
Gamer-themed Valentine coloring pages work because they’re:
Familiar without being intense
Creative without needing skill
Calm without being boring
They fit naturally into Valentine’s Day plans that are more about comfort than spectacle.
Some low-key ways people use them:
Coloring while chatting on voice or Discord
Taking a break between matches
Sharing finished pages as jokes, gifts, or posts
Using them as casual décor or desk art
It’s not about “arts and crafts” in a traditional sense. It’s more like interactive downtime, something to do with your hands while your brain rests.
Valentine’s Day, Gamer Edition
Whether you’re in co-op or solo queue, Valentine’s Day doesn’t have to look any particular way. Gaming culture already values time spent, shared experiences, and personal choice, all things that translate surprisingly well to the holiday.