Jewel Box Game

  

Jewelbox is a computer game developed by Varcon Systems for the Macintosh.It is a clone of Sega's Columns. citation neededJewelbox was originally published as shareware, in 1992, and was developed by Rodney and Brenda Jacks, with music by Jim Holt. Play Disney Princess Jewel Box card game with your Disney Princesses at igrezadecu.com. To win the game collect as many cards as possible. Each time you win, you get a Princess Collector card. Try to collect as many of 18 Princess Collector cards as you can. Jewel Box is a 5-reel, 15-line online slot game with bonus round, autoplay, video slots, multiplier, wild symbol, scatter symbol, gamble feature, mobile gaming and a jewels theme you can play at 663 online casinos. Open the purple coloured Jewel Box and enjoy a sparkling selection of the finest pieces of jewellery! Try them on by spinning the 5 reels and get dazzled away. The Jewel box hides not only Sapphires and Emeralds but also two bonus rounds the option to gamble your jewels and increase your winning! 15 lines might give you the winning. Explore mysterious jungle ruins and create lines of three or more ancient relics to claim the Mayan gold. Play the free game Jewel Quest!

About Princess Jewel Box Game

Play cards like Disney Royalty in this Princess Jewel Box game. If you like Disney movies and simple games with a collectible element, this is for you! You play against two computer-controlled opponents, present at the top, but they are surely no match for your extraordinary skill.

All you need to do is pick a jewel card from either of the two decks at the top. You will have drawn one of four types of cards: green, blue, purple and pink. Green cards don’t do much. They have pictures of classic Disney props, like the Genie’s lamp, or Beast’s rose. If you draw one, you keep it.

How to play the game

Blue cards have princes on them, such as Adam (Beast), Aladdin and Eric. Every prince card you draw gives you the right to pick another card.

Purple cards are villain cards. Iago, Ursula, Jafar and the rest are out to steal all the cards you’re holding! If you draw a villain card, all of your cards will go to the free zone, in the middle of the screen.

But the Disney Princesses are here to save the day! If you draw a pink princess card, all the cards in the free zone become yours!

When your turn is over, the next player to the left follows, until there are no more cards at the top. Once there are no more cards at the top, the player holding the most cards wins! And there’s a prize, too. Every single time you win, you will be awarded a collectible princess card. There are 18 of them. Can you get them all?

Jewel

Game Details and Stats

Jewel Box Game Online

Princess Jewel Box is an excellent Disney Princess game that you can play on Freegamedays.com for free. It has been added to our website on Tuesday, May 29, 2018.The game has been played 62467 times so far and has received a rating of 82 / 100 from a total of 61 user votes, 50 likes and 11 dislikes. Princess Jewel Box uses Flash technology to be compatible with most browsers. The game window resolution has been optimized for best visual performance, having the width of 730px and the height of 550px.If you enjoy playing Princess Jewel Box, you might be excited finding out that there are 40 more Disney Princess games you can try! The most popular is Cinderella Dress Up and the most recently added is Brave: Highland Games

(Redirected from Jewel Box (video game))
Jewelbox
Publisher(s)Varcon Systems
Platform(s)Macintosh
Genre(s)Puzzle

Jewelbox is a computer game developed by Varcon Systems for the Macintosh. It is a clone of Sega's Columns.[citation needed]

Jewelbox was originally published as shareware,[1] in 1992, and was developed by Rodney and Brenda Jacks, with music by Jim Holt.[citation needed] After its initial release, Jewelbox was published as a commercial game by Varcon Systems. The commercial version added many new features including support for different display sizes and more powerups including the ability to collect and play wildcard jewels whenever you wanted. Varcon sold the game individually and as part of a three-game package of arcade challenges.[2]

Jewel box game online

Gameplay[edit]

Colored gems fall from the top of the screen, and the player must manipulate them to form patterns that erase themselves. When the playing area fills up with gems, the round is over. Special gems cause different things to happen.[2] The player must manipulate the jewels to form lines of three or more horizontally, vertically or diagonally. Jewels are affected by gravity, allowing the player to set up chain reactions which multiply the value of the gems matched. When the playing area is filled, it is cleared and the player loses one life - unlike Tetris, the player is given three lives in each game, and the opportunity to earn additional lives by reaching points milestones. Gems are worth different numbers of points, with black onyx-like stones being the most valuable.[citation needed]

The game includes an easter egg where matching three black jewels on the bottom row of the play area resulted in a huge points bonus.

Reception[edit]

The game was reviewed in 1994 in Dragon #211 by Jay & Dee in the 'Eye of the Monitor' column. Jay did not rate the game, but Dee gave the game 3½ out of 5 stars. Dee noted that the gameplay is vaguely similar to that of Tetris, but that 'Jewelbox is not just a clone—it has intriguing rules all its own, including special gems that cause amazing things to happen, and beautiful sound and graphics'.[2]

Laurel Clyde, in the book Managing Infotech in School Library Media Centers mentions Jewelbox as one of the games 'that pay homage to Tetris while extending the concept in new directions'.[3]

Larry Hanson, in his book Everything You Wanted to Know About the Mac, said that Jewelbox 'deserves special praise, not only for its nice graphics and music, but also for its packaging. Instead of the shelf-hogging cardboard boxes most games come packed in, Jewelbox (like Varcon's other games) comes in a re-useable suede bag.'[1]

Legacy[edit]

Update as of 9/18/2011: Jewelbox for iOS and Android is currently under development and will be published by Hot Rod Games (Rodney Jacks).[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abHanson, Larry (December 1993). Everything You Wanted to Know About the Mac. p. 1232. ISBN1-56830-058-1.
  2. ^ abcJay & Dee (November 1994). 'Eye of the Monitor'. Dragon (211): 39–42.
  3. ^Clyde, Laurel A. (1999). Managing Infotech in School Library Media Centers. Libraries Unlimited. p. 158. ISBN1-56308-724-3. jewelbox varcon.

Disney Princess Jewel Box Game

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