Beads Out Level 346 Guide
The puzzle identity of Level 346 is stack congestion near the top edge. If you lock in tight-space recovery, the run stabilizes, and you can decline risky shortcuts unless they are forced.
The puzzle identity of Level 346 is stack congestion near the top edge. If you lock in tight-space recovery, the run stabilizes, and you can decline risky shortcuts unless they are forced.
For this stage, the most reliable pattern is a three-phase flow: stabilize the opening, control the midgame transfer order, and finish with a strict cleanup sequence.
Opening Plan
Stage your opener in three mini-cycles: set, test, lock. Hold this plan through move 5. Keep this discipline even if progress looks slow.
Timing Cue
Lock your best anchor before touching risky side conversions. Re-check lane ownership around move 12. Use this to avoid accidental reversals.
Phase 1
Stage your opener in three mini-cycles: set, test, lock. Hold this plan through move 5. Keep this discipline even if progress looks slow. This is your opening anchor for Level 346. If this phase is stable, the remaining route is much easier to control.
Phase 2
Lock your best anchor before touching risky side conversions. Re-check lane ownership around move 12. Use this to avoid accidental reversals. Treat this as the rhythm checkpoint. Keep transfers steady here to avoid midgame lockups.
Phase 3
Use your recovery tube only for the final lock-break conversions. Keep this active in the last 12 moves. This removes most endgame variance. This is your finishing control layer. Apply it after the main stacks are stable to clean residual beads with less risk.
- • Stage your opener in three mini-cycles: set, test, lock. Hold this plan through move 5. Keep this discipline even if progress looks slow.
- • Lock your best anchor before touching risky side conversions. Re-check lane ownership around move 12. Use this to avoid accidental reversals.
- • Use your recovery tube only for the final lock-break conversions. Keep this active in the last 12 moves. This removes most endgame variance.
- • Common trap: ignoring checkpoint shape and drifting move by move. You can spot it when lane congestion spikes unexpectedly. If this happens, pause and reset to the previous stable board shape instead of improvising extra moves.
- • Secondary trap: over-cleaning edges while core blockers remain active. You can spot it when lane congestion spikes unexpectedly. If this happens, pause and reset to the previous stable board shape instead of improvising extra moves.
Keep one correction move unspent until the final third of the board. For Level 346, keep the opener unchanged for two full attempts before altering only one transition action.
- • Step 1: replay your opening and verify first-route stability.
- • Step 2: compare midgame transfer order with the walkthrough.
- • Step 3: keep one final correction move for endgame cleanup.
Adjacent Levels
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