
Jewel Match Twilight
120 haunted match-3 levels, three play modes, hidden crypts, and a gothic soundtrack that genuinely sets a mood. Worth a look if you want low-stakes puzzle therapy with some actual atmosphere behind it.
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About Jewel Match Twilight
I have a soft spot for the kind of casual game that quietly does more than it advertises, and Jewel Match Twilight is exactly that. On the surface it looks like a themed gem-swapper you'd find bundled in a storefront sale and forget about by Tuesday. Spend an hour with it, though, and the craft starts to show through. The match-3 core is straightforward: clear gold squares by matching three or more identical icons, and coax special tokens down to the bottom of each grid. What Suricate Software does cleverly is layer multi-board levels where individual boards connect through gateways that you must unlock in sequence. Some boards carry mandatory sub-tasks, matching a quota of bats or releasing a colour-keyed unlock, so you are always juggling short-term board state against longer-term level goals. That is more texture than most casual match-3 games bother with. Seven purchasable power-ups sit in the in-game shop, funded by coins you gather across levels and from 48 replayable bonus games that include hidden object scenes and Mahjong. The bonus games are not filler; they are a genuine gear-change that break up extended board-clearing sessions. The three play modes, timed, relaxed, and move-limited, mean the same 120 levels can feel completely different depending on what your evening asks of you. Relaxed mode is close to a meditative space: no clocks, no countdowns, just the gothic art and a soundtrack that leans into slow, minor-key atmosphere in a way I find genuinely lovely. The optional secret crypts tucked inside levels reward exploration rather than demanding it, which feels like a respectful design choice. The presentation stays cohesive throughout: dark colour palette, animated board elements, moonlit backdrops. It is not trying to be a horror game, but the gothic mood is maintained with more consistency than most casual titles manage. The fair criticisms are real. Repetition is the genre's original sin, and no amount of bonus games fully inoculates a 120-level match-3 against stretches where you feel like you are running the same play twice. There is also no strong narrative thread tying the haunted-castle journey together. If you need a story reason to keep going, this will not supply one. Long-term players across the series have also flagged achievement reliability as occasionally spotty, so completionists should go in with tempered expectations. Who is this for? Casual puzzle fans who want something with a defined session structure, pick-up-put-down flexibility, and an aesthetic that goes beyond primary colours and cheerful music. If you have ever put two hours into a match-3 on a flight and wished the vibe had been stranger and moodier, Jewel Match Twilight is built for exactly that mood. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 177 MB available space
- Graphics
- 64MB VRAM
- Processor
- 1GHz
- Sound Card
- Any
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Suricate Software
- Publisher
- Grey Alien Games
- Release Date
- Oct 27, 2022
