![]() In some levels these gems are not on squares with yellow borders. Pay attention to the square the locked gem is on. Once a match is made with a locked gem, the lock will disappear with the other gems in the match, but the gem itself will remain. You may have to maneuver same coloured gems towards the lock gems to do this since the locked gem cannot move. To remove a lock, make a match including the locked gem. Until the lock is removed they will remain in the one position. They also cannot fall to fill space below them like other gems. Gems with locks on them cannot be moved (swapped with adjacent gems). On later levels some gems may start the game with a lock symbol on them such as number 4 in the Gem Match picture above. Stones are removed from the board by making a match adjacent to them. If you have a string of stones across the middle of the entire board, you must remove at least one stone before gems can travel to the bottom half of the board to replace any you might remove by making matches. No gem can enter a square with a stone on it, and no gem can travel through a square with a stone on it to fill space created below it by a match. On later levels some squares will start with a stone covering them, such as in number 3 on the Gem Match picture above. Creating a second match on the square is necessary to completely remove the border. The square then looks like a regular square with a yellow border. Completing one match on a square of this type will remove the diamond. The second yellow border is at an angle to the first, so looks like a diamond over the square. In addition to squares with a yellow border, squares with 2 yellow borders (such as the one shown in number 2 in the Gem Match board shown above) must also be removed from the game board. All other matches made in the game do not count towards the game's progress (but can be useful in setting up matches on the squares with yellow borders). The object of the game is to remove these yellow borders by creating matches where 1 gem is on the square with the yellow border. Number 1 in the game board above shows an orange gem on a square with a yellow border. ![]() As you progress through the Gem Match game and advance it to higher levels, these types of square are gradually introduced. ![]() There are four main types of squares on a Gem Match game board. If no matches are available on the board at any given point in the game, all the gems on the board will reshuffle into new positions. The only way to lose Gem Match is to run out of time. When the progress bar is filled, no squares with yellow borders remain, and the game is won. The progress bar at the bottom of the game board shows what percentage of the squares with yellow borders have been removed. This is done by matching 3 or more gems of the same colour, when one of the gems is on a square with a yellow border. The object of the game is to remove all the squares with yellow borders. Gems may be swapped with any neighbouring gem, but only if the swap creates either a horizontal or vertical line of 3 or more gems of the same colour. ![]() As gems are removed from the board, the gems above them fall to fill the space created and new gems are added from the top of the board.ฤก: a square with one yellow border (the object of the game is to remove these squares) 2: a square with a double yellow border (two matches must be made on these squares before they are removed fully) 3: a stone covering a square with yellow border 4: a locked gem 5: a vertical striped gem 6: a horizontal striped gem 7: a bomb gem 8: a multicoloured gem Lining up 3 or more of the same coloured gems removes them from the board.
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