Super Color Lines and the five-gem crystal board
In Super Color Lines, you drag or tap crystals onto the board and build lines of five or more matching gems, so every move is about shaping the next clear rather than filling space at random. The bright jewel artwork makes each color pop, which helps you track open lanes fast on a crowded grid.
Each non-scoring turn adds more pieces, so the real challenge is deciding where to park a crystal before the board tightens up. Aim for rows that can grow in two directions, because a single placement can open a chain clear and buy you another turn. That makes the early board feel very different from the late one.
This fits the logic category because you are reading the board one move ahead, not just matching for speed. The same pattern spotting shows up in the puzzle tag, where every placement changes the next line you can build. It also overlaps with the matching idea, since identical colors only pay off when they become part of a longer run.
If you want a different pace, Jewels Blitz 5 leans harder into mission-style jewel play. Goo Deluxe keeps the color-chain feel but changes how the board opens up. Jewel Link is another close match because it also rewards careful linking and board reading.
You can play it free online with no signup, and it works well on mobile and desktop with simple mouse or touch control. Because the board keeps feeding in new pieces, the run has an endless edge instead of a fixed stage count. You can jump in for a short score chase or keep going until the grid gets crowded.
Good runs usually start by keeping one lane open near the center and using the edges for temporary drops. When you stack the same color into a near-line, you can create a longer chain on the next turn instead of spending moves on cleanup. That small bit of planning turns a simple board into a high-score chase, especially when a single bad placement adds more clutter.
Platform
Browser Desktop , Mobile and Tablet
Release
10 september 2019
Last Update
10 september 2019