Jewel Coloring level guide

Jewel Coloring Level 40 Walkthrough

hard 5 colors

Jewel Coloring Level 40 is a tall broadcast tower pixel art on a narrow vertical grid. The grey/silver tower lattice rises through the center as a thin 2-4 gem column, with a pink/magenta observation deck and accent bands partway up. Tan/orange base supports spread wider at the bottom, and blue sky fills the background on both sides. The extreme height-to-width ratio and the narrow structural column that must remain unbroken from base to antenna tip make this one of the most precision-demanding levels so far.

Board Notes

Layout
A tall narrow pixel grid shows a broadcast tower (resembling Tokyo Tower). Grey/silver lattice structure runs vertically through the center as a narrow column, tapering toward the top. A pink/magenta observation deck sits partway up with additional pink accent bands. Blue sky background fills both sides of the tower and the top. Tan/orange base supports spread outward at the bottom in a wider foundation shape. The tower narrows to 1-2 gems at the antenna tip. The grid is significantly taller than wide.
Goal
Fill the blue sky as the largest region flanking both sides of the tower. Build the grey/silver lattice column through the full grid height. Place the pink/magenta observation deck and accent bands. Fill the tan/orange base supports at the foundation.
Opening
Start with the pink/magenta observation deck and accent bands — these distinctive horizontal landmarks divide the tower into sections. Fill the tan/orange base supports at the bottom next. Then build the grey lattice column from the base upward. Finally fill the blue sky background on both sides.
Danger Zone
The grey tower lattice is only 2-4 gems wide through most of its height, with blue sky pressing in from both sides — a single misplaced blue gem breaks the tower's structural line. The pink observation deck spans only a few horizontal rows and shares boundaries with grey above and below. The base supports transition from wider orange at the bottom to narrower grey shaft through a precise angled line. The antenna tip narrows to 1-2 gems where any blue overfill removes the tower's top entirely.
Mechanics
The extreme vertical aspect ratio is the defining feature — the tower is far taller than wide, and most of the grid is sky background flanking a narrow central structure. Maintaining a thin consistent column through the full grid height without breaks or wobbles is unlike any challenge in previous levels. The lattice pattern may include internal gaps or cross-bracing where sky shows through the framework, adding detail within the already narrow column.

Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 40 (spoiler-free)

  • Build from the observation deck both upward and downward — this recognizable landmark anchors your vertical alignment at a distinctive feature rather than trying to hold a thin column straight across 20+ rows from one end.
  • Count gems per row to maintain consistent tower width. The lattice should be 2-4 gems wide at each row — if a row suddenly has fewer or more, the column has drifted and needs correction before continuing.
  • Think in chain clears. The best move is the one that sets up the next two moves, not just the quickest current match.

How to Solve Jewel Coloring Level 40 — Full Solution

  1. Place the pink/magenta observation deck gems and any accent band details — these horizontal landmarks visually divide the tower into manageable sections.
  2. Fill the tan/orange base support gems at the bottom of the grid, tracing the wider foundation legs that taper upward into the narrower tower shaft.
  3. Build the grey/silver tower lattice gems from the base upward through the center column, maintaining the narrow 2-4 gem width consistently at each row.
  4. Add the antenna tip gems at the very top of the tower, tapering to 1-2 gems — verify they connect to the column below without gaps.
  5. Fill the blue sky background gems on both sides of the tower and across the top, working carefully to avoid encroaching on the narrow grey column.

Colors in this level:

Grey, Pink, Blue, Tan, Orange

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Starting the grey lattice from the antenna tip and working downward — the 1-2 gem tip provides almost no alignment reference, and any drift compounds over the full tower height. Starting from the wider base or observation deck is far more stable.
  • Filling blue sky before completing the grey tower column, which risks placing blue gems inside the narrow lattice and breaking the tower's structural continuity.
  • Extending the grey lattice through the pink observation deck rows, overwriting the deck and eliminating the tower's most distinctive architectural feature.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Why is the tower so easy to break?

    The tower lattice is only 2-4 gems wide for most of its height, and blue sky fills both sides. A single misplaced gem — one blue gem inside the column or one missing grey gem — creates a visible break in the structure. No other level demands this degree of sustained narrow-column precision across so many rows.

  • What is the best starting point for building the tower?

    Start at the pink observation deck, the most recognizable horizontal feature. Build the grey lattice upward toward the antenna and downward toward the base from this landmark. This anchors your alignment at a clear reference point rather than trying to maintain a thin column straight from one end of the grid to the other.