Sand Loop Level 291 Solution Walkthrough | Sand Loop 291
How to solve Sand Loop level 291? Get instant solution for Sand Loop 291 with our step by step solution & video walkthrough.

Sand Loop Level 291 Guide: The Watermelon Bear Puzzle
This isn't a speed level, but it can feel like one because the supply tray is packed so densely. Sand Loop Level 291 features a pixel art piece of a White Bear holding a large slice of Watermelon against a Blue Sky. The vibe is cute, but the logic is strict: you are digging. The cups you need for the main subject (the bear) are buried at the bottom of the stack, forcing you to clear layers of other colors first.
The color palette is distinct:
- Primary White: The bear's fur (takes up about 40% of the canvas).
- Bright Red: The watermelon flesh and the bear’s blush/eyes.
- Deep Green: The watermelon rind.
- Solid Blue: The background sky.
Sand Loop Level 291 Solution: The "Buried White" Problem
Look at the top screen versus your supply tray. This is the disconnect that trips people up. The single largest object in the pixel art is the White Bear. However, look at your top row of cups. There is zero White sand available immediately.
The Danger Zone: Your supply stack is a "vertical dependency" puzzle.
- Top Row: Red and Blue.
- Second Row: White and Green.
- Third Row: Red, Blue, and White.
You cannot paint the bear until you clear the "trash" off the top. Many players stare at the screen waiting for a white cup to appear magically. You have to aggressively clear the Reds and Blues to dig down to the White cups in the second and third layers.
Fill Order Prediction: The game forces you to paint the Watermelon (Red) and parts of the Sky (Blue) first. The Rind (Green) comes second. The Bear (White) will likely be the last thing you finish, simply because the white cups are at the bottom of the supply columns.
Tackling the 6-Column Stack in Sand Loop Level 291
The specific obstacle here is the 6-Column Supply vs. 5-Slot Conveyor.
You have 6 columns of cups in the tray, but your belt capacity is capped at 5. You cannot simply swipe across the entire top row. If you tap all 6 cups rapidly, the last one will fail to load, potentially throwing off your sequence if you needed that specific color to clear a blocker.
This setup demands that you play in bursts of 4 or 5. Never try to clear a full horizontal row in one go. You must prioritize columns that block the colors you need next. For example, the Green cups (needed for the rind) are in columns 2 and 5 (second row). You must clear the Red cups sitting on top of them specifically to access the Green sand.
Sand Loop Level 291 Step-by-Step Walkthrough
This level is all about "vertical drilling." You aren't clearing rows; you are drilling down columns to find the White sand.
1. The Red/Blue Flush (Top Layer)
Your first move is relatively scripted by the tray. You have four Red cups and two Blue cups on top.
- Tap the Red cups in the center columns (2, 3, 4, 5).
- Do this immediately. The watermelon takes up a large chunk of the bottom center, and these reds will fill it perfectly.
- Do not tap the side Blue cups yet. Let the Reds hit the conveyor and start pouring. This keeps your slot count manageable (4/5).
2. Accessing the Rind (Second Layer)
Once the Red cups clear the top of columns 2 and 5, you will see Green cups exposed.
- Now, tap the two side Blue cups (Columns 1 and 6) to start filling the sky background.
- Immediately follow up with the Green cups.
- Timing matters here. The Red sand needs to finish pouring for the watermelon flesh before the Green sand pours the rind, strictly for visual satisfaction, though the game logic usually sorts the pixels correctly. The main reason to stagger them is to keep the belt moving without hitting the "Full" error.
3. Drilling for the Bear (Third Layer & Below)
By now, you have cleared the top two layers of the central columns. You finally have access to White cups.
- The bear needs a massive amount of white sand.
- Prioritize any column that has a White cup on top. Ignore the Blues and Reds in the lower layers unless they are blocking a White cup.
- You will see a pattern in the bottom rows: White and Blue alternate. This is the "fill phase." You can get into a rhythm here. Tap White, Tap Blue, Tap White.
- Since the Bear (center) and Sky (edges) are distinct areas, you don't need to worry about contamination. You can have Blue and White cups on the belt simultaneously.
4. The Final Cleanup
As you reach the bottom of the stack (Row 5), you might have leftover Red or Blue cups.
- Check the canvas. Is the sky finished? If the Blue bar is at 100%, do not send more Blue cups. They are waste.
- Focus only on the remaining pixels. Usually, a few stray white pixels on the bear's ears or the watermelon seeds (Red) are the last to fill. Identify which column holds that specific color and clear only that column. Don't empty the tray if you don't have to.


