Your soap doesn't have a partial gel, but I can't say if each batch got warm enough to gel or not. There is truth that gelling makes colors more saturated/brighter, but you'd want to compare a sample of the color in not-gelled soap with a sample of the same color in gelled soap.
Taken out of that context, it's hard to tell gel vs. not-gel just by looking at color. A pastel blue in a batch of gelled soap will look softer and less saturated than a medium blue in another batch of soap that didn't gel.
I also don't always see the visual cue of a darker oval of gelled soap, but I don't stress over it.
In the first few hours after pouring the soap, I check the sides of the loaf to see if the soap and the mold are obviously warming up. Definitely and pleasantly warm is a good sign.
I also check for cracking and swelling of the top -- if I see swelling, the soap is getting overly warm. Cracks are a step further into overheating. In either case, I usually sit the mold on several soup cans or a cookie cooling rack and put a little fan to blow room temperature air over the entire mold. That works well to cool things down.
The second thing I check the next day is whether the loaf is reasonably firm all over something like refrigerator-cold cheese, or if the loaf feels soft-ish to a gentle finger press more like molding clay. The extreme corners sometimes stay a bit softer than I'd like, which means they didn't gel, but if most of the loaf is firm, I don't worry too much. If the entire loaf is soft and dentable, then the soap didn't get warm enough to gel.