Yarn Loop level guide
Yarn Loop Level 70 Walkthrough
Level 70 plays like a scenery-management level disguised as a cactus level. If you clear the sky belt and ground beds in the right order, the central cactus becomes much less intimidating and the long endgame stops snowballing.
Verified Board Notes
- Initial Layout Geometry
- The board shows a desert scene dominated by a tall green cactus in the center. A deep blue sky fills the top half with a bright yellow sun and white clouds, orange flower beds sit across the bottom corners, and a long dark top ledge carries a yellow-and-pink mound over the cactus. Two keyholes are visible on the cactus trunk, so the picture is split into three obvious zones: sky, cactus body, and the two lower desert beds.
- Goal / Target Area
- The player has to open the sky and the lower flower beds first so the cactus trunk and the top ledge stop being trapped between separate outer layers. The central cactus looks like the main subject, but the long blue sky band and the two orange-red ground patches keep the loop occupied much longer than the trunk itself. Late in the run, the board still refuses to finish until the top ledge and both lower corner beds are cleaned up alongside the cactus body.
- Opening Moves
- Gameplay begins around 00:08, and the first productive colors go heavily into the sky: blue and cyan attack the upper-right and side walls while the big sky lane is still intact. Brown and ground-side colors join only after that first sky pass starts moving, and the cactus green mostly waits because the trunk is boxed in by blue above and orange beds below. The early route is therefore sky first, scenery second, cactus third.
- Danger Zone
- The board gets especially unstable around 01:20-01:40, where the meter repeatedly hits 0/5 while sky pieces, the top ledge, cactus arms, and both lower flower beds are all demanding different colors. This is the moment where the scene looks half open but is actually split into too many disconnected zones. The run only calms down after the blue sky belt shortens and one of the lower desert beds finally breaks apart.
- Unique Mechanics
- Level 70 is not one tall cactus clear; it is a long scenic board with separated chores above, below, and through the middle. The top shelf with the yellow-pink mound survives as its own cleanup track, and the two bottom flower beds linger independently on the left and right after the cactus trunk has already thinned out. That is why the last minute leaves little floating sky pixels, top-shelf crumbs, and tiny red-orange flower fragments instead of one central cactus outline.
Quick Tips for Level 70 (spoiler-free)
- If both bottom flower beds are still alive, you are not in pure cactus cleanup yet. Treat the board as a three-zone scene until at least one corner bed is gone, or the trunk colors will keep stalling between sky and ground traffic.
- 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 70 — Full Solution
- Open with blue and cyan on the sky band, especially the upper-right wall and the long top stretches around the clouds.
- Start trimming the lower desert beds next so the cactus is not trapped between a full sky ceiling and two full ground pockets.
- Delay most cactus-green pushes until the sky belt and at least one flower bed have clearly opened, then use green to work the trunk and side arms.
- Around `01:20-01:40`, pause fresh inputs if the meter falls to `0/5`, and let one sky lane plus one ground lane finish before adding more cactus or top-ledge colors.
- Finish by cleaning the dark top ledge and yellow-pink top mound, then remove the last cactus trunk strips and the stubborn red-orange corner flowers on both sides.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Clearing the easiest color first rather than the one blocking other loop routes.
- Closing a narrow lane that a same-colored yarn path needs later.
- Forgetting that each cleared loop creates new open paths — always reassess after each clear.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I clear first in Yarn Loop Level 70?
Gameplay begins around 00:08, and the first productive colors go heavily into the sky: blue and cyan attack the upper-right and side walls while the big sky lane is still intact. Brown and ground-side colors join only after that first sky pass starts moving, and the cactus green mostly waits because the trunk is boxed in by blue above and orange beds below. The early route is therefore sky first, scenery second, cactus third. Level 70 plays like a scenery-management level disguised as a cactus level. If you clear the sky belt and ground beds in the right order, the central cactus becomes much less intimidating and the long endgame stops snowballing.
When does Yarn Loop Level 70 usually get jammed?
The board gets especially unstable around 01:20-01:40, where the meter repeatedly hits 0/5 while sky pieces, the top ledge, cactus arms, and both lower flower beds are all demanding different colors. This is the moment where the scene looks half open but is actually split into too many disconnected zones. The run only calms down after the blue sky belt shortens and one of the lower desert beds finally breaks apart. If both bottom flower beds are still alive, you are not in pure cactus cleanup yet. Treat the board as a three-zone scene until at least one corner bed is gone, or the trunk colors will keep stalling between sky and ground traffic.
What shows that Yarn Loop Level 70 is moving into cleanup?
The player has to open the sky and the lower flower beds first so the cactus trunk and the top ledge stop being trapped between separate outer layers. The central cactus looks like the main subject, but the long blue sky band and the two orange-red ground patches keep the loop occupied much longer than the trunk itself. Late in the run, the board still refuses to finish until the top ledge and both lower corner beds are cleaned up alongside the cactus body. Level 70 is not one tall cactus clear; it is a long scenic board with separated chores above, below, and through the middle. The top shelf with the yellow-pink mound survives as its own cleanup track, and the two bottom flower beds linger independently on the left and right after the cactus trunk has already thinned out. That is why the last minute leaves little floating sky pixels, top-shelf crumbs, and tiny red-orange flower fragments instead of one central cactus outline.