Yarn Loop level guide

Yarn Loop Level 35 Walkthrough

easy

Level 35 is safest when you open the white field and ear frame before you chase the tongue or collar. Once the shell is weaker, the dog face collapses in a much more controlled order and the small accent colors stop clogging the loop.

Verified Board Notes

Initial Layout Geometry
The opening board is a brown-and-white dog face on a mostly white background with blue crack-like corner streaks. Pink tongue and cheek accents sit below the muzzle, and a green collar strip crosses under the face. The dog face is obvious, but structurally the board is a white shell wrapped around brown ear slabs, a central muzzle, and several small accent patches.
Goal / Target Area
The level does not open by chasing the muzzle first. The white shell and one side of the brown ear frame need to shrink before the face center clears cleanly, and the collar-tongue accents linger longer than they appear. The board only becomes comfortable after the side frame and one large white lane are already shorter.
Opening Moves
The first useful pulls begin around 00:10-00:18 and hit the lower white edge plus the first brown frame pieces rather than the pink tongue. More white and brown follows while the green collar stays almost untouched in the opener. The early route is background-and-frame first.
Danger Zone
The tightest traffic jam shows up around 01:00-01:30, when the meter repeatedly drops to 0/5 while white shell strips, brown ear pieces, black outline stubs, the green collar, and the pink tongue are all still alive together. The dog looks half open there, but the shell and frame are still supporting too many small accents. The run relaxes only after one side frame and one white lane finally disappear.
Unique Mechanics
Level 35 is a face board with a strong white shell. The dog portrait is compact, but the broad white field and the brown ear frame survive independently around it, and the collar-tongue details turn into separate mini cleanups. That is why the board feels busier in the middle than the simple opening art suggests.

Quick Tips for Level 35 (spoiler-free)

  • If the white background still wraps tightly around both ears, the face center is still trapped. Keep weakening the shell first, because the muzzle and tongue clear much faster once the dog is no longer boxed in.
  • Focus on one color at a time: connect its loop cleanly, then move to the next color.
  • If the board feels stuck, look for the color with the cleanest open loop and clear that route first.

How to Solve Yarn Loop Level 35 — Full Solution

  1. Start with the broad white shell and the first brown ear-edge strips so the portrait loses its frame early.
  2. Keep trimming white and brown together until the muzzle area has real exposed gaps.
  3. Bring in the green collar next only after the lower face is already breathing.
  4. Save most pink tongue and cheek cleanup for later, because those accents do not help while the shell is still large.
  5. Around `01:00-01:30`, pause fresh taps if the meter bottoms out, let one white lane and one ear-side strip clear, then finish the muzzle, collar, and final tongue scraps.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Starting a color before checking whether its full loop route is open.
  • Clearing the nearest yarn segment while leaving its matching color blocked.
  • Rushing the first move before spotting which color has the cleanest path.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What should I clear first in Yarn Loop Level 35?

    The first useful pulls begin around 00:10-00:18 and hit the lower white edge plus the first brown frame pieces rather than the pink tongue. More white and brown follows while the green collar stays almost untouched in the opener. The early route is background-and-frame first. Level 35 is safest when you open the white field and ear frame before you chase the tongue or collar. Once the shell is weaker, the dog face collapses in a much more controlled order and the small accent colors stop clogging the loop.

  • When does Yarn Loop Level 35 usually get jammed?

    The tightest traffic jam shows up around 01:00-01:30, when the meter repeatedly drops to 0/5 while white shell strips, brown ear pieces, black outline stubs, the green collar, and the pink tongue are all still alive together. The dog looks half open there, but the shell and frame are still supporting too many small accents. The run relaxes only after one side frame and one white lane finally disappear. If the white background still wraps tightly around both ears, the face center is still trapped. Keep weakening the shell first, because the muzzle and tongue clear much faster once the dog is no longer boxed in.

  • What shows that Yarn Loop Level 35 is moving into cleanup?

    The level does not open by chasing the muzzle first. The white shell and one side of the brown ear frame need to shrink before the face center clears cleanly, and the collar-tongue accents linger longer than they appear. The board only becomes comfortable after the side frame and one large white lane are already shorter. Level 35 is a face board with a strong white shell. The dog portrait is compact, but the broad white field and the brown ear frame survive independently around it, and the collar-tongue details turn into separate mini cleanups. That is why the board feels busier in the middle than the simple opening art suggests.