Jewel Quest Expedition
- 180 unique jewel boards to solve
- Jewel matching stylus fun!
- 1-8 Player
Product Description
Form groups of three or more matching jewels with your stylus. Turn the penetrate to gold and make cascades of more jewels! Jewel Quest Expeditions is a puzzle adventure owing to Africa sure to captivate your senses and imagination with each turn!
Buy Cheap Jewel Quest Expedition
Related posts:

thanks for the quick quick turn around YOU all amaze of the alacrity that goes into any ORDER
Rating: 5 / 5
its fun and keep play not fed up to end looklike indiana jones! I have other game Mah jong quest expeditions nearly same them. I like both it. You buy that Mah jong quest expeditions is bit different also storyline. I will buy that final fantasy soon.
Rating: 4 / 5
If you haven’t played the game, it’s a variation of a basic puzzle game type, in which you slide pieces around on a penetrate in order to make matches. You can only go a piece in one of the four cardinal directions, and once a match is made, the pieces disappear, and the chairs that the matched pieces previously occupied turn gold. Pieces will fall from the top to fill any empty chairs, which sometimes results in massive, screen-clearing chain-reactions. The ultimate goal is to highlight every square on the penetrate before time runs out.
While the early puzzles are simple, difficulty soon ramps up. Partially obscured pieces appear, which require you to match them up with like-colored pieces in order to free them up. One more match takes them out completely. Later puzzles involve pieces that are really obscured, and require a bit of guess work and one extra step to clear. Some puzzles even require you to turn each square silver, and then to gold in order to clear the penetrate. Throw in hazards such as a monkey mask that undoes any chairs you’ve cleared if you match three of them, as well as progressively tough penetrate layouts and new puzzle pieces that appear every so often as you progress, and you’ve got a game that will challenge any dedicated puzzle fan.
You have one helpful tool to aid you in your Quest, in the form of Lion coins. Make a match of three of these coins, and you’ll have the ability to clear a release square. They can be used at any time, which means that if you play your cards right, you can stock-pile a few of these before you reach the more hard puzzles, which makes things a bit simpler. The game is still pretty hard in later stages, but the inclusion of these “saves”, so to speak, ensures that the difficulty never gets too out of hand. At least until the challenge stages.
As I said earlier, the game is a near-exact port of the PC version of Jewel Quest 2. The puzzles are the same, as is the order in which you progress owing to them. There is no new make pleased to make the DS version worth looking at for those who have played the PC version profoundly. The DS version only differs in a few minor areas, the first being the increased focus on the tale. While the tale is likewise exactly the same as the one found in the PC version, the way it is presented is different. The tale is presented in cut-scene stylishness, complete with character-portraits. While the way it is presented looks decent, the tale is still as nonsensical and superfluous as it was in the PC version, so it’s ultimately a change that has no bearing on the game one way or the other.
Another difference lies in the interface. Using the DS stylus, you can shift pieces around a whole lot quicker and simpler than you could using a mouse in the PC version. But, due to the DS’ small screen size, it’s not uncommon to accidentally go pieces you didn’t mean to. It’s certainly not a deal-breaker though, as it’s rarely causes problems in early levels, and you’ll have it well in hand by the time you get to the more hard puzzles.
By and large, Jewel Quest: Expeditions is a worthy investment. It’s a splendid variation on a common puzzle theme, and it’s chock-full of replay regard. If you’ve played the PC version you may want to pass, but eif you’ve never played it before and delight in puzzle sports meeting, then you owe it to yourself to pick up a copy.
Rating: 4 / 5
I am looking, as are many other people, for a bejeweled-like game for ds. This is sort of the same, but it’s not as much of a challenge. There are more “automatic” scores. The music is better than Bejeweled’s, tho. I’m going to keep this one in mind and keep looking. There doesn’t seem to be any way to turn off the “timer,” a feature I would like. mb
PS. I played the online “free” version at (I reflect) iWin.
Rating: 2 / 5
This Nintendo DS game seems to play just like the PC version that I had sampled. I only gave it 3 stars because as you get up in levels when some of the “Jewels” are covered in “black tar” they don’t show a small hint of what the affect of the jewel is making matches nearly impossible. Otherwise it is a excellent game.
Rating: 3 / 5