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Yarn Loop level guide

Yarn Loop Level 248 Walkthrough

hard

Level 248 is much smoother when you cut the plant through the center early. Remove petals, but keep the stalk and background shrinking so the board does not end with one stubborn vertical line.

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Verified Board Notes

Initial Layout Geometry
The opening board is a vertical floral design on a pale grid background. Three orange flower medallions stack down the center, green leaves branch off the sides, and blue corner accents sit near the top. The tray opens with orange, red, yellow, green, blue, white, and gray spools.
Goal / Target Area
The board only closes after the orange blossoms, the green leaf stems, and the pale gridded background all disappear. The flowers are the biggest shapes, but the long green stem line and thin background strips keep the picture alive late into the clear.
Opening Moves
Start by breaking the top and middle orange flowers while also opening the connecting green stem. That prevents the picture from remaining one long vertical column.
Danger Zone
The slowest section is around 01:40-02:20, when most blossoms are gone but the board still carries a narrow green stalk, a few petal rings, and thin background scraps near the top. Those long vertical leftovers can orbit longer than expected.
Unique Mechanics
Level 248 is a stacked floral column rather than a wide scene. The blossoms drop in chunks, but the true endgame is the slender stem and the leftover rectangular background pieces that remain after the flowers have mostly vanished.

Quick Tips for Level 248 (spoiler-free)

  • If only one skinny green stem and a few orange petal bits remain, go after the stem first. On this level, the center line is usually the last real blocker.
  • Focus on one color at a time: connect its loop cleanly, then move to the next color.
  • Think in chain clears — the best move here is the one that opens two or three later routes, not just the fastest current match.

How to Solve Yarn Loop Level 248 — Full Solution

  1. Open the top and middle orange flowers in the first cycles.
  2. Start trimming the green central stem and side leaves so the vertical column breaks apart.
  3. Weaken the pale background around the blossoms while the flower rings are still large.
  4. Around `01:40-02:20`, target the remaining stalk and petal loops before cleaning isolated dots.
  5. Finish by clearing the last flower-edge crumbs, leaf strips, and background scraps together.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Not planning the chain clear: each finished route should immediately set up the next one.
  • Moving a yarn segment without confirming the matching color can still connect later.
  • Ignoring choke points where two colors cross and block each other.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What should I clear first in Yarn Loop Level 248?

    Start by breaking the top and middle orange flowers while also opening the connecting green stem. That prevents the picture from remaining one long vertical column. Level 248 is much smoother when you cut the plant through the center early. Remove petals, but keep the stalk and background shrinking so the board does not end with one stubborn vertical line.

  • When does Yarn Loop Level 248 usually get jammed?

    The slowest section is around 01:40-02:20, when most blossoms are gone but the board still carries a narrow green stalk, a few petal rings, and thin background scraps near the top. Those long vertical leftovers can orbit longer than expected. If only one skinny green stem and a few orange petal bits remain, go after the stem first. On this level, the center line is usually the last real blocker.

  • What shows that Yarn Loop Level 248 is moving into cleanup?

    The board only closes after the orange blossoms, the green leaf stems, and the pale gridded background all disappear. The flowers are the biggest shapes, but the long green stem line and thin background strips keep the picture alive late into the clear. Level 248 is a stacked floral column rather than a wide scene. The blossoms drop in chunks, but the true endgame is the slender stem and the leftover rectangular background pieces that remain after the flowers have mostly vanished.

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