Yarn Loop level guide

Yarn Loop Level 36 Walkthrough

easy

Level 36 is easiest when you open the water and sky before you try to finish the boat body. Once the long top and bottom bands are weaker, the hull and cabin stop clogging the loop and the scene collapses in a much cleaner order.

Verified Board Notes

Initial Layout Geometry
The opening board is a small boat on blue waves under a bright yellow sun. A white upper field and gray cloud-like smoke fill the sky, the boat body is brown with a white cabin and blue windows, and the wave strip runs straight across the bottom. The picture behaves like three stacked layers: sky, boat, and water.
Goal / Target Area
The safest opening target is the wave strip and the broad sky field, not the cabin center. The boat is sealed between the water below and the white-yellow-gray sky above, and the hull does not collapse well while those long horizontal zones are still alive. The board only starts to breathe once one sky section and one wave run have been shortened.
Opening Moves
The first productive pulls begin around 00:10-00:18 and focus on the lower wave line plus early white and blue sky-side pieces. Brown hull work comes later, while the cabin and little top details stay mostly intact during the opener. The early route is horizon-first and shell-first.
Danger Zone
The nastiest sustained jam comes around 02:00-02:40, when the meter repeatedly bottoms out while white sky, gray smoke, yellow sun fragments, blue waves, and brown hull sections are all alive at once. The boat looks half finished, but the long horizontal layers keep feeding separate colors into the loop. The run only calms down after one wave strip and one upper sky section finally disappear.
Unique Mechanics
Level 36 is a stacked scene with long horizontal dependencies. The wave line, the hull deck, and the upper sky each survive as separate bands, so the board drags far longer than its small boat subject suggests. The final cleanup becomes a mix of little mast-side scraps, wave crumbs, and sky dots.

Quick Tips for Level 36 (spoiler-free)

  • If the full wave line still runs across the bottom, the boat is still boxed in from below. Keep cutting the horizon and sky first, because the hull clears much faster once the scene loses its long horizontal braces.
  • 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 36 — Full Solution

  1. Start with the blue wave strip and the widest white or gray sky sections so the scene opens from both ends.
  2. Keep trimming one wave lane and one upper sky lane until the boat has clear exposed edges.
  3. Bring in brown hull cleanup next, then use white and blue on the cabin only after the shell bands are already shorter.
  4. Save most tiny sun, smoke, and mast detail work for later, because those accents do not help while the long bands are still strong.
  5. Around `02:00-02:40`, pause fresh taps if the meter hits `0/5`, let one wave strip and one sky section clear, then finish the hull, cabin, and remaining sky crumbs.

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 36?

    The first productive pulls begin around 00:10-00:18 and focus on the lower wave line plus early white and blue sky-side pieces. Brown hull work comes later, while the cabin and little top details stay mostly intact during the opener. The early route is horizon-first and shell-first. Level 36 is easiest when you open the water and sky before you try to finish the boat body. Once the long top and bottom bands are weaker, the hull and cabin stop clogging the loop and the scene collapses in a much cleaner order.

  • When does Yarn Loop Level 36 usually get jammed?

    The nastiest sustained jam comes around 02:00-02:40, when the meter repeatedly bottoms out while white sky, gray smoke, yellow sun fragments, blue waves, and brown hull sections are all alive at once. The boat looks half finished, but the long horizontal layers keep feeding separate colors into the loop. The run only calms down after one wave strip and one upper sky section finally disappear. If the full wave line still runs across the bottom, the boat is still boxed in from below. Keep cutting the horizon and sky first, because the hull clears much faster once the scene loses its long horizontal braces.

  • What shows that Yarn Loop Level 36 is moving into cleanup?

    The safest opening target is the wave strip and the broad sky field, not the cabin center. The boat is sealed between the water below and the white-yellow-gray sky above, and the hull does not collapse well while those long horizontal zones are still alive. The board only starts to breathe once one sky section and one wave run have been shortened. Level 36 is a stacked scene with long horizontal dependencies. The wave line, the hull deck, and the upper sky each survive as separate bands, so the board drags far longer than its small boat subject suggests. The final cleanup becomes a mix of little mast-side scraps, wave crumbs, and sky dots.