Adobe Firefly Hidden Objects adds Level .064; creator tests badge watermarks
Glenn Williams pushed the Adobe Firefly Hidden Objects series to Level .064 and began testing watermark strategies after suspected reuse without credit. Watch these tests if you publish repeatable image formats and want attribution protection without cluttering outputs.

TL;DR
- Glenn Williams pushed his Adobe Firefly-made Hidden Objects series to Level .064, extending a repeatable puzzle format that had already reached Level .063.
- The new dollhouse puzzle shows the format staying consistent: one dense scene, five target icons, and a composition designed for close visual scanning.
- After Williams said his update was prompted by suspected uncredited reuse, he began testing watermarking directly into the series workflow.
- In a follow-up watermark poll, Williams compared two attribution options and then said option B looked cleaner.
What changed in Level .064
Level .064 swaps prior workshop and facade scenes for a cross-section dollhouse packed with small props, patterned rooms, and five object targets along the bottom edge. The new post also shows the series now carrying a visible circular maker badge in the image itself, reading as an attribution layer rather than part of the puzzle.
That matters because the format is clearly becoming serialized. Earlier entries like Level .062 and Level .063 used the same recipe: a richly dressed environment, a fixed “find all 5 hidden objects” prompt, and outputs made in Adobe Firefly with Nano Banana 2.
How the watermark test is evolving
Williams said he would start marking the puzzles as his own after learning someone may be using them without credit, and that he planned both watermark designs and a branded prompt edit for future generations. That makes the attribution test part of the image-generation workflow, not just a post-production overlay.
His two live options were a character generated into the image with a watermarked answer key, or a separate watermark badge plus the watermarked answer key. He later said cleaner badge he was leaning toward the badge approach, and Level .064 appears to show that direction in practice.