Jewel Match Solitaire 2 Collector's Edition
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About Jewel Match Solitaire 2 Collector's Edition
My first few sessions with Jewel Match Solitaire felt like finding a quiet reading nook that nobody else at the party had discovered. The main loop is Tri-Peaks-style higher-or-lower chaining: flip a card from your draw pile, then chain through the board by playing cards that are one rank above or below the last one played. Combos multiply your coin haul, and breaking a long chain because you ran out of moves stings in the satisfying way all good card puzzles do. The board designs do real work here. Obstacles drop in steadily as you progress through the five castles, each demanding specific tools to clear: frozen cards need two hits before they free up, vines require a scythe card buried somewhere in the layout, wax seals lock out entire stacks until you match the right suit or color, and chains can only fall when a hammer card surfaces. None of these are revolutionary mechanics in isolation, but layered together across 200 levels they keep the basic chain-and-clear from going stale. The shop, funded by coins and gems you scavenge from every board, lets you upgrade wildcards, jokers, and reshuffles, and those upgrades feel genuinely meaningful in the later castle stages rather than cosmetic fluff. Three difficulty modes give the game a wider berth than most casual solitaires bother with. Relaxed allows multiple passes through the draw deck, Normal sticks to a single deal as tradition demands, and Hard adds a timer that I suspect was designed by someone who considers a library a stressful environment. Stick to Normal for the intended experience. Bonus game variants, including Klondike, Pyramid, Scorpion, Aces Easy, and Royal Family, unlock as you accumulate stars in the main campaign. They sit outside the campaign proper, which some players will find frustrating and others will treat as a welcome change of pace. The soundtrack earns the word atmospheric: unhurried orchestral loops that genuinely fade into the background without ever becoming irritating, the audio equivalent of soft candlelight. The honest caveat is this: the base Steam release is the shorter version of what Suricate eventually turned into the Collector's Edition, and if you fall for the formula you will likely want that larger build eventually. Steam sentiment sits around 90 percent positive from the people who did play it, and the criticism that surfaces most often is not about quality but about volume, specifically that the Collector's Edition offers more levels and solitaire variants for only a bit more money. If you have never sampled the series, this entry is a perfectly solid introduction. If you already own a later Jewel Match title, the 200-level count may feel lean by comparison. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 7.0
- Storage
- 137 MB available space
- Graphics
- 64MB VRAM
- Processor
- 1GHz
- Sound Card
- Any
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Game Info
- Developer
- Suricate Software
- Publisher
- Grey Alien Games
- Release Date
- Jul 26, 2018





