Bejeweled Stars

Last updated
Bejeweled Stars
Bejeweled Stars cover.png
Developer(s) PopCap Games
Publisher(s) Electronic Arts
Series Bejeweled
Engine Unity
Platform(s) iOS, Android, Facebook, Pogo
Release
  • Canada: December 2015
  • WW: May 10, 2016
Genre(s) Puzzle
Mode(s) Single-player

Bejeweled Stars (formerly known as Bejeweled Skies [1] during its soft-launch) is a tile match-3 game developed by PopCap Games and distributed by Electronic Arts. It is the third spin-off title in the Bejeweled series and the first to debut on smart devices. The game was soft-launched in Canada in December 2015, and was released worldwide on May 10, 2016. [2]

Contents

Unlike previous games in the series, Bejeweled Stars is centered around the completion of levels, similar to Candy Crush Saga . Once the player has completed one level, the next one is unlocked. Each level has its own objective, and some levels introduce the player to various game mechanics such as currents, clouds, Special Gems and further unique goals.

Plot

Corvus the StormCrow creates a powerful object in the PowerLab that accidentally shatters the constellations in the sky, scattering the stars across the land. Felis the StarCat and Corvus the StormCrow ask the player for help to rebuild the constellations. [1]

Gameplay

Like the other games in the series, Bejeweled Stars involves the player swapping two adjacent gems to create a line of three or more gems. When this occurs, the matched gems disappear from the board, with other gems falling down, potentially creating cascades. Matching four or more gems can create Special Gems, which can destroy multiple gems at once. Matching four gems in a row or creating a 2x2 space of same-colored gems will create a Flame Gem, which explodes and destroys the eight gems that surround it. Making a T, L or +-shaped match creates a Star Gem, which destroys all the gems on its row and column. Creating a match of five gems in a row creates a Hyper Cube, which destroys all the gems of its color when swapped with a gem. If a match of six gems or more is made, it will form into a DarkSphere, which turns all the gems of the swapped gem's color into Hypercubes. Stars adds the ability to merge the abilities of the Special Gems by swapping two adjacent Special Gems (ex: swapping two Flame Gems creates a larger explosion, while swapping a Hyper Cube with a Star Gem turns all the gems of its color into Star Gems, etc.).

Unlike previous entries in the series, Bejeweled Stars involves the use of completing levels with different goals, with a limited number of moves the player is allowed to perform. The goals and moves the player can perform differ between each level (ex: the player must clear all gravel from the board in 25 moves, clear 40 red gems in 30 moves, etc.). The board shape, size and layout differ between stages, but are always below 10x10. Gems cannot be moved into empty spaces, unlike previous entries. For the first time in the series, gaps can be present inside the game board. Gems can also fall diagonally into empty spaces that have gaps above them. Several boards have gimmicks that help or hinder the player's progress (ex: Currents shift the positions of the gems on top of it to the direction signalized every time a move is made, Clouds allow the player to move the gems on top of it to an empty cloud slot of which they desire without using a move, and more). [3] Completing a level gives the player up to three stars, with the amount of stars received determined by the total score achieved on that level. Earning stars forms part of several constellations, which unlock powers in the PowerLab when fully completed, alongside coins and eggs being awarded by completing several pieces of a constellation.

When no moves are possible, all the gems on the board (except Special Gems) scramble. The amount of gem colors start at a small amount, but begin to increase further in the level, until all 7 colors are present, making it harder to make matches. A level is lost when the move count reaches zero or a butterfly escapes the game board. Losing or quitting a level will deduct one life from the life bar (which is represented by a heart). When no more lives are present, the player cannot play the game until they have at least one life. Lives regenerate by one every 30 minutes, and will generate a maximum of five lives (but can be expanded to six through an in-app purchase), can be regenerated by spending coins or can be received from other Facebook friends. Players may win unlimited life awards on certain occasions that turns the lives bar to gold, granting infinite play for a short period of time.

Occasionally during gameplay, special normal gems known as SkyGems appear on the board, which can be collected as ingredients to use in the PowerLab. The PowerLab is a feature that allows the player to create power-ups using their collected SkyGems. Once a power begins creating, the player must wait until it completes, or can watch an advertisement or spend coins to hurry the creation.

Additional features include collectibles known as Emojis (known as Charms in earlier versions), which are used for the player's bio and to answer Yama's questions, a loot-box system known as the Surprise Chicken, and a daily-altering challenge. Events that happen in-game can usually alter some gems to certain objects which fill an event meter, which can grant special awards. [2]

Release

Bejeweled Stars was originally soft-launched in Canada under the title Bejeweled Skies on December 2015. The game would go under many changes following the release of the game through updates. An HTML5 version for Facebook was launched on September 26, 2016. [4] A scaled-down version of the game was released on the Pogo platform on July 25, 2020. [5]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Puzzle video game</span> Video game genre

Puzzle video games make up a broad genre of video games that emphasize puzzle solving. The types of puzzles can test problem-solving skills, including logic, pattern recognition, sequence solving, spatial recognition, and word completion. Many puzzle games involve a real-time element and require quick thinking, such as Tetris (1985) and Lemmings (1991).

<i>Bejeweled</i> 2001 puzzle video game

Bejeweled is a tile-matching puzzle video game by PopCap Games, developed initially for browsers in 2001. The first game developed by PopCap under their current name, Bejeweled involves lining up three or more multi-colored gems to clear them from the game board, with chain reactions potentially following.

<i>Crash Bash</i> 2000 video game

Crash Bash is a 2000 party video game developed by Eurocom Entertainment Software in association with Cerny Games and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation. It is the fifth title in the Crash Bandicoot series and the first in the party genre. The game includes a collection of 28 mini-games playable within three modes of gameplay, as well as eight playable characters from the Crash Bandicoot series.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">PopCap Games</span> American video game developer

PopCap Games, Inc. is an American video game developer based in Seattle, and a subsidiary of Electronic Arts. The company was founded in 2000 by John Vechey, Brian Fiete and Jason Kapalka.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pogo.com</span> Web based video gaming service

Pogo.com is a free online gaming website that offers over 50 casual games from brands like Hasbro and PopCap Games. It offers a variety of card and board games to puzzle, sports and word games. It is owned by Electronic Arts and is based in Redwood Shores, California.

<i>Bejeweled 2</i> 2004 puzzle video game

Bejeweled 2 is a tile-matching puzzle video game developed and published by PopCap Games. Released as a sequel to Bejeweled, Bejeweled 2 introduces new game mechanics, such as Special Gems and extra game modes, along with new visuals and sounds.

<i>Chuzzle</i> 2005 video game

Chuzzle is a tile-matching puzzle video game developed by American studio Raptisoft Games and published by PopCap Games. The game involves connecting three or more fuzzballs named Chuzzles.

<i>Bejeweled Twist</i> 2008 puzzle video game

Bejeweled Twist is a tile-matching puzzle video game developed and published by PopCap Games. It is the third game overall and first spin-off game in the Bejeweled series, as well as being the first PopCap title to be released in high definition and feature widescreen support.

<i>Gyromancer</i> 2009 video game

Gyromancer is a puzzle and role-playing video game developed by PopCap Games in collaboration with Square Enix. The player moves through a map of an enchanted forest, battling monsters using their own summoned monsters through a puzzle-game battle based on PopCap's Bejeweled Twist. In these battles, the player rotates groups of four in a grid of gems to line up three or more jewels of the same color; when enough lines have been created damage is dealt to the enemy. Between battles, a story is told through a series of cutscenes, while the player and the summoned monsters gain experience and power using role-playing elements.

<i>Bejeweled Blitz</i> 2010 puzzle video game

Bejeweled Blitz is a puzzle video game, originally a Facebook application which was developed and published by PopCap Games; since 2011 Electronic Arts took over the publishing and distribution duty after EA acquired PopCap. It developed into a downloadable game, based on the then-in-development Bejeweled 3 engine, due to popularity of the differences from Bejeweled 2 and its new graphics. As with the Bejeweled series, Bejeweled Blitz is based on the Shariki game mechanic. It is the fourth game of the Bejeweled franchise and initially was available on iOS as part of the Bejeweled 2 iOS application, later on with the standalone iOS application. The game was then released on Android devices.

<i>Bejeweled 3</i> 2011 puzzle video game

Bejeweled 3 is a tile-matching puzzle video game developed and published by PopCap Games. It is the fifth game in the Bejeweled series following Bejeweled Blitz and succeeds Bejeweled 2 as the latest mainline title in the Bejeweled series. It was released for PC and Mac on December 7, 2010, as part of the 10 Years of Bejeweled celebration, which celebrated the 10th anniversary of Bejeweled, and has been ported to several other consoles afterward.

Bejeweled is a series of tile-matching puzzle video games created by PopCap Games. Bejeweled was released initially for browsers in 2001, followed by seven sequels: Bejeweled 2 (2004), Bejeweled Twist (2008), Bejeweled Blitz (2009), Bejeweled 3 (2010), Bejeweled LegendBejeweled Stars (2016), and Bejeweled Champions (2020) all by PopCap Games and its parent, Electronic Arts. More than 10 million copies of Bejeweled have been sold, and the game has been downloaded more than 350 million times. By February 2010, Bejeweled sales hit 50 million. The figure includes the original game, plus the Blitz and Twist versions. An arcade version was released in Q3 2013.

<i>Capcom Fighting Evolution</i> 2004 video game

Capcom Fighting Jam, released in the US as Capcom Fighting Evolution, is a 2004 head-to-head fighting game from Capcom. It was originally released as a coin-operated arcade game for the Namco System 246 hardware and ported to the PlayStation 2 and Xbox. The game features characters from three different incarnations of the Street Fighter series, as well as characters from the Darkstalkers series and the CPS III arcade game Red Earth, with each character employing the fighting system from the game which they represent.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tile-matching video game</span> Type of puzzle video game

A tile-matching video game is a type of puzzle video game where the player manipulates tiles in order to make them disappear according to a matching criterion. In many tile-matching games, that criterion is to place a given number of tiles of the same type so that they adjoin each other. That number is often three, and these games are called match-three games.

<i>Candy Crush Saga</i> 2012 video game

Candy Crush Saga is a free-to-play tile-matching video game released by King on April 12, 2012, originally for Facebook; other versions for iOS, Android, Windows Phone, and Windows 10 followed. It is a variation of their browser game Candy Crush.

<i>Marvel Puzzle Quest</i> 2013 video game

Marvel Puzzle Quest is a video game released by D3 Go! and Marvel Entertainment on October 3, 2013, and developed by Demiurge Studios. The fourth installment in the Puzzle Quest series, it is a free-to-play, match-three Bejeweled-style puzzle battle game set in the Marvel universe, featuring 305 playable, unlockable, recruitable Marvel characters.

<i>Letters of Gold</i> 2013 video game

Letters of Gold is a word puzzle game released by Brazilian studio Cupcake Entertainment in October 2013 for Facebook. In March 2015, the game reached 400 levels. The game is periodically updated, adding new "episodes" and levels.

<i>Love Rocks Starring Shakira</i> 2015 video game

Love Rocks was a mobile tile-matching puzzle video game, developed by Rovio Entertainment released on October 15, 2015, for Android and iOS devices worldwide. The game featured colombian singer, composer and actress, Shakira. However, after several updates within its first few months, the game was discontinued and sometimes in 2018 it was removed from the app stores.

<i>Magic: The Gathering – Puzzle Quest</i> 2015 mobile puzzle video game

Magic: The Gathering – Puzzle Quest is a puzzle video game that combines the gem-matching concept in Puzzle Quest and its sequels, with the collectible card game aspects of Magic: The Gathering. It was released for mobile systems in December 2015.

<i>Peggle Blast</i> Puzzle video game

Peggle Blast is a casual puzzle video game developed by PopCap Games and published by Electronic Arts in the Peggle franchise. Released on December 2, 2014, to Android and iOS, it is the second game in the franchise released to mobile, the first being a port of Peggle. Blast was exclusively available on Google Play Store and App Store until its release to web browsers as Peggle Blast HD on March 31, 2020. Electronic Arts announced Blast in late 2014.

References

  1. 1 2 "Bejeweled Skies Is a Thing, Now Live in Canada". Archived from the original on 2021-12-05. Retrieved 2021-12-05.
  2. 1 2 "PopCap Games Celebrates the All-New Bejeweled Stars, Available Now on Mobile Devices". www.businesswire.com. 2016-05-10. Retrieved 2021-12-05.
  3. Arts, Electronic (2017-02-06). "Bejeweled Stars - Free App - EA Official Site". Electronic Arts Inc. Retrieved 2021-12-05.
  4. Arts, Electronic (2016-09-26). "Bejeweled Stars is Coming to Facebook!". Electronic Arts Inc. Retrieved 2021-12-05.
  5. Bejeweled Stars Trailer | Free Online Match 3 Game | Pogo , retrieved 2021-12-05