Jewel Coloring level guide

Jewel Coloring Level 99 Walkthrough

easy 6 colors

Jewel Coloring Level 99 builds a rounded blue cat face with dark navy ear corners, pink inner ears and cheeks, a wide white muzzle, a black sleepy-eye band, tiny mint accent squares, and a short black mouth bar. Put the expression on first, then close the blue fur around it so the cat stays soft instead of stiff.

Board Notes

Layout
A chubby cat head fills the board. Bright blue fur wraps the top and sides, dark navy cells anchor the ear corners, side tabs, and chin strip, both ears contain pink inner panels, the face center is mostly white, a black sleepy-eye band stretches across the middle, mint accent squares sit under the eyes, and pink cheeks cluster near the lower corners.
Goal
Fix the black face band, the mint accent squares, and the pink ear panels before the large white muzzle and blue fur are filled. The expression only survives if those small face details remain separated inside the oversized cat head.
Opening
Draw the black eye band and short mouth bar first, then add the mint accent squares and pink cheeks. Fill both pink inner ears next, spread the white face through the center, and wrap the light-blue fur and dark navy corners around the outside last.
Danger Zone
The white muzzle is the biggest single-color shape on the board and shares boundaries with the black eye band, the mint accent squares, and the pink cheeks — all of which are small clusters of 2–4 gems. Starting the white fill before those details are placed erases them in one pass because white has no internal texture or outline to mark their former positions. The dark navy edge blocks sit at the ear corners, side tabs, and chin strip; they share a similar blue family with the bright blue fur, so bleeding navy into the fur zone — or vice versa — removes the shadow-to-fur gradient that gives the head its rounded, layered outline. The mint accent squares under the eyes are the most fragile detail: only 1–2 gems each, sitting at the boundary between the white muzzle and the blue fur.
Mechanics
This is an expression-first mascot board where the character's personality depends on tiny face accents rather than the overall silhouette. The black eye band, mint squares, pink cheeks, and short mouth bar all carry the cat's expression, and they collectively account for fewer than 20 gems in a board dominated by two large fills (white muzzle and blue fur). The solve inverts the usual ratio — instead of one small focal zone inside a large body, there are four to five micro-details scattered across the face that must all survive two different large fills closing in from opposite directions (white from the center, blue from the outside). The dark navy shadow cells around the edges add a third layer that must stay distinct from the bright blue fur, creating a three-tone blue gradient from center to edge.

Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 99 (spoiler-free)

  • Anchor the black face band before you touch the white muzzle.
  • Keep the dark navy cells on the corners and chin only; they are shadows, not the main fur color.
  • If the board feels stuck, look for the color with the cleanest path and use that to regain space.

How to Solve Jewel Coloring Level 99 — Full Solution

  1. Draw the black eye band across the middle of the face and leave the short black mouth bar centered below it.
  2. Place the mint accent squares under the eyes and the small pink cheek cells near the lower corners of the face.
  3. Fill the pink inner panels inside both ears.
  4. Spread the white forehead and muzzle through the center of the face without covering the black band.
  5. Build the light-blue outer head around the cheeks, ears, and top bridge.
  6. Finish the dark navy ear corners, side tabs, and chin strip, then clear the remaining pale background.

Colors in this level:

Bright blue, Dark navy, White, Pink, Black, Mint

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Flooding the white muzzle first and burying the mint accent squares — the mint details are only 1–2 gems each sitting at the boundary between white and blue, and once the muzzle fill covers their positions there is no contrast or outline to guide relocation without undoing a large section of the face.
  • Turning the dark navy corner shadows into the main bright blue fur color. The two blues are close in hue, and spreading the bright blue outward past the fur boundary overwrites the navy shadow cells; without the shadow layer the head loses its rounded edge gradient and looks like a flat blue cutout.
  • Skipping the pink cheek cells and flattening the cat's expression. The cheeks are small 2–3 gem clusters near the lower corners of the face, and they are the only warm-toned detail on the entire board; without them the face reads as a monochrome white-and-blue mask instead of a soft, friendly cat.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What should I fill first in Jewel Coloring Level 99?

    Start with the black face band, the short mouth bar, and the mint accent squares. Those tiny features establish the expression before the white muzzle and blue fur spread across the board.

  • Why does the cat in Level 99 look stiff?

    That usually means the mint accents, cheek dots, or black mouth spacing were buried under the white face. The board depends on those small expression details to keep the cat looking soft.