My Singing Monsters Wiki
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The following article is about an app that has been discontinued and is no longer supported. Please only edit this article if you are able to access this content.

FJD screenshot 01

Gameplay of Furcorn's Jelly Dreams

Furcorn's Jelly Dreams was a spin-off match-three game of the My Singing Monsters game. It was soft launched in Canada and wasn't made public anywhere else. Big Blue Bubble has officially stated it has been discontinued in favour of Jammer Splash and that there are no plans to release the game or continue development on it. It was then removed from the Canadian App Store following Big Blue Bubble's statement that it was discontinued. Coincidentally, its succesor was no longer supported and eventually removed years later.

The game features a Furcorn that dreams about different eggs from various islands to become hatched. The player has to pass levels with a match-three game sort of gameplay. Passing enough levels earns a new egg and thus a new monster. Unlike most match-three games, the jellies cannot be switched and must instead be either popped or swiped to produce matches. However, popping and swiping jellies does not have to produce a matching triplet.

Gameplay[]

The game itself is based on the concept of match-three games. Basically the player has to match three or more jellies to remove them and gain points. Having enough points can make the player pass the level, assuming that other criteria in a level has been met too. Instead of switching jellies, the player either pops one square of jelly or swipes a whole jelly.

Matching[]

Matching four squares of jelly makes a bomb, exploding when tapped on. Matching five squares of jelly makes a leaf shooter that shoots diagonally. Matching six or more squares of jelly makes a color bomb, which when tapped will destroy all jellies of the color morph that the color bomb originally had. A superbomb can be produced by matching three bombs which explodes in a 5x5 radius. Other stronger powerups are created by matching three or more of the same type close-by. Some jellies take up more than 1x1 square and remain on the highest jelly that they are sitting on. Color-matching or popping parts of a rectangle jelly larger than 1x1 will split the jelly. Like most match-three games, any cascading matches from falling jellies will earn more points.

Any spare moves after completing a level replace certain remaining jellies with powerups. Any remaining jellies after that pop and gain the remaining extra points.

Types of level[]

Three types of level can appear: one for simply collecting the given requirement of jellies, obstacles or powerups; one for bring Furcorn eggs to the bottom of the screen; one for simply gaining enough points. If there are spare Furcorn eggs left on screen after completion of a collect-Furcorn-eggs level, they will be eliminated and gain some extra points as part of the end-of-level extra points opportunity.

Obstacles[]

There are also obstacles, such as dirt, which acts similarly to Candy Crush's Meringue Blocks. Also the water blocks, which remain in one place but slide jellies along it. There are also permanent blocks, which cannot be destroyed but can be passed through by the leaf shooters. Ice freezes one jelly per turn adjacent to them, but instead of fully consuming the target jelly, it stops them from use, similar to Liquorice Locks from Candy Crush, un-locking if a match to it is done or if a powerup destroys the locks, although it may be able to move by gravity. Logs are blocks that can only be broken through powerups, but can move downwards by gravity.

Featured Monsters[]

Completing certain levels will hatch a monster egg on the map nearby, the monster will begin contributing to the song. There were ten monsters for two songs on the map.

Plant Island

Cold Island

The following Monsters were likely planned for Air Island.

Gallery[]

Notes[]

  • The islands in Furcorn's Jelly Dreams have different songs from the original game's songs.
    • These songs were eventually incorporated into the main game’s Colossingum as "Plant Reverie" and "Cold Reverie". A third, "Air Reverie", is likely what Air Island's song may have been if the game had been continued.
  • There were two island songs, Plant Island and Cold Island, available in the soft launch of the game. Although, more were planned to be added like Air Island, Water Island, and Earth Island. It can be seen at the top and right sides of the Continent, respectively.
  • The Furcorn on the bottom-right corner also comments in its distinct Furcorn accent whenever many cascading jelly matches are done. Examples include the monster commenting "Chewy!", "Yummy!", "Superific!", "Awesome!", "Thunderous!", "Sweet!", "Jelly Rain!", and "Squishy!". If a player runs out of moves, it will comment "Uh oh!". It has a high-pitched male voice.
  • Unlike other match-three games, there were no powerups to use in this game, thus making level 119 very impossible to beat without spending Diamonds.
  • The game had only 150 levels (75 levels for each island). If level 150 was passed, the game would show a pop-up saying "Coming Soon" when the next level was tapped. This is where Air Island levels would've started - if the game hadn't been discontinued.
    • The full version game would've gotten 375 levels for each of the Natural Islands.
  • Furcorn's Jelly Dreams was only available in the Canada store and wasn't added globally, as it was in beta testing.
  • When the game was connected to Facebook, you could see where friends were along the map as their Facebook icon displayed where they had gotten up to so far in the game.
  • There was a G'joob egg at the top-left corner for the eggs, but this was never released.
  • Furcorn's Jelly Dreams eventually became Jammer Splash.
    • Big Blue Bubble released a statement that Furcorn's Jelly Dreams was discontinued, and that they were using the game to experiment with the idea of a My Singing Monsters match-three game on their website, following fans pleading for a response towards why the game was discontinued after My Singing Monsters Youtuber MSMPokeGamer made a livestream asking fans to speak out to Big Blue Bubble to get a response to why the game hasn't been made globally available.
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