
Once you’re ready, tap the ‘Ask friends’ button again. A list of all your in-game friends will pop up, and you can toggle them to your heart’s content by checking or unchecking the boxes next to their names.A screen will pop up with an even bigger countdown timer and a message for you to, “Ask your friends for more lives.” Tap the ‘Ask friends’ button.Tap on the lives icon in the upper-left corner of the main screen, which should have a number less than five (remember?) and a countdown timer until you would earn your next life naturally.When you are in need of lives, here’s what you need to do.

That might sound confusing for now, but it will make more sense once you’ve been playing Candy Crush Friends Saga for a bit. If you run out of lives, you will have the chance to ask your friends to help you, or you can use the lives that have already been received. If your friend sends you multiple sets of lives then you will only see one set in the queue, once they have been accepted then you will be able to receive any more requests which are then re-sent. Here’s how the game’s own help section describes it: But the big deal is that you can’t “store” lives to refill when you want. You need to be down at least one life before you can do anything at all. The most important difference is that if you have full lives, you can’t even ask your friends for help.

Candy Crush Friends Saga works a little differently. However, in King’s other Saga games, of which the original Candy Crush Saga remains, well, the king, having a lot of friends to send you lives was of the utmost importance because you could ask them to send you free lives and manage them to always have five on hand if necessary. And in the process, you’re going to run out of lives, because you can only have five of them at a time, as you probably have already guessed.

In fact you’re going to hit levels where you fail repeatedly, dying multiple times before you eventually get it figured out. I’ve got some bad news for you: When you’re playing Candy Crush Friends Saga, you’re eventually going to fail.
