Pixel Flow Level 411 Solution | Pixel Flow 411 Walkthrough

How to beat Pixel Flow Level 411: Video solution & walkthrough. The fastest way to pass Pixel Flow 411.

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Pixel Flow Level 411 Walkthrough

This level is a festive voxel puzzle featuring a grey "Santa Bear" peeking out of a chimney against a purple, snowy night sky. It’s a dense block of colors with distinct layers. You have a massive amount of purple on the edges, a central grey mass for the bear, and a tricky mix of red and brown at the bottom for the chimney.

Is it hard? I’d classify this as a very hard level. Not because the shapes are weird, but because the ammo counts are high (20 per pig), and the "snow" pixels are scattered. It is incredibly easy to accidentally strand a white pig because you shot one snowflake and have no other targets, clogging your slots instantly.

Pixel Flow Level 411 Overview

Picture a grey bear wearing a Santa hat, stuck halfway up a chimney. The background is a deep purple night sky filled with floating white snowflakes. The bear itself is mostly grey (silver) with white muzzle details.

The top half of the board is dominated by the bear’s head and the purple sky. The bottom half is the "danger zone"—the chimney. It’s a thick block of brown bricks, red stripes, and more snow. The asymmetry here is vertical. The top is relatively clean (large blocks of grey and purple), while the bottom is messy and layered. The biggest trap is the white color. It exists as solid blocks (hat trim, muzzle) and as single, isolated pixels (snowflakes). If you aren't careful, the snowflakes will eat your pig slots alive.

Step by step solution walkthrough for Pixel Flow Level 411

First Color Zone to Erase in Pixel Flow Level 411

I strongly recommend attacking the Purple Background first.

Here is the logic: The purple sky forms two massive, vertical pillars on the left and right sides of the bear. Unlike the scattered white snowflakes, the purple zones are solid and deep. When you get a Purple pig (which usually comes early with high ammo, like 20), you can essentially hold down the trigger and clear huge swathes of the board without worrying about the pig dropping prematurely.

Clearing the purple accomplishes two things. First, it isolates the central figure (the bear), making it easier to see the depth of the layers. Second, it removes the visual noise of the background so you don't accidentally shoot a purple block when aiming for the bear's ears. Get the sky out of the way.

How to pass Pixel Flow Level 411 without power ups or boosters

Once the purple sides are shaved down, the board looks like a floating totem pole of a bear. This is the critical mid-game phase. You will likely see a queue of White, Grey, and Red pigs.

The strategy here is "Solid Blocks Over Snowflakes."

You will be tempted to clear the white snowflakes floating in front of the chimney. Don't. Not yet. Prioritize the Grey (Bear Face) and the Red (Hat). These are central, thick structures. If you grab a White pig, aim specifically for the hat's white trim or the muzzle. Do not tap the single floating snowflakes unless you are sure you can drag your finger to a solid white block immediately after.

If you focus on the Red hat and the Grey face, you reduce the height of the central tower. This is vital. If the center remains too high, it blocks your line of sight to the chimney layers behind it. Peel the bear's face off layer by layer. Save the brown and red chimney base for when the top is mostly gone.

Last Details You Clean Up in Pixel Flow Level 411

The end game is almost always the Chimney Base and the stray Snowflakes.

By the time you reach the final 20% of the level, you’ll be left with the brown bricks of the chimney and the red stripes. This area is "crunchy"—lots of alternating colors. You might get a Brown pig but only see three brown pixels exposed. Take the shot, but be ready for the pig to drop into a slot.

The absolute last things to go are usually the tiny white snowflakes that were hiding behind the chimney structure or deep in the corners of the purple sky you missed earlier. Keep one slot open for a "cleanup" White pig to handle these single-pixel annoyances. If you clog your slots with high-ammo pigs that can't hit these last specks, you'll fail right at the finish line.