That’s My Seat Level 1907 Pattern Overview
Level 1907 of That’s My Seat challenges players to meticulously arrange 16 jewelers at their workstations, each busy crafting unique rings. The board presents a 3x6 grid of 18 tables, each featuring a ring in various stages of completion—some are just metal bands, some have stones, and some sit alongside a jeweler's hammer. The core of this puzzle lies in matching the correct character portrait to their designated seat based on a series of descriptive clues that gradually appear at the bottom of the screen.
The Overall Puzzle Structure
At the start of Level 1907, players are greeted with a fully occupied jewelry workshop. Each of the 18 tables in the 3x6 grid has a ring, some with a hammer indicating an ongoing project, others appearing finished. The rings themselves vary by metal (gold or silver) and stone color (red, green, or blue). Below the main grid, a carousel displays a rotating selection of character portraits. As clues are revealed, players must drag and drop the correct character to their respective seat. The level is fundamentally testing observational skills, logical deduction, and the ability to interpret potentially ambiguous spatial and descriptive clues, often requiring careful re-evaluation of past assumptions.
The Key Elements at a Glance
The central elements of Level 1907 are the 18 tables, each representing a jeweler's station, and the various character portraits that need to be seated.
- Jewelry Tables: Each table features a ring. These rings are defined by:
- Metal Type: Either a silver-colored band or a gold-colored band.
- Stone Color: Red, green, or blue stones are visible on some rings. Others have no stone yet.
- Work Status: A small hammer on the table indicates a ring is "being made" or "working on," while its absence implies a finished ring.
- Character Portraits: A diverse cast of characters, each with unique features (hair color and style, accessories like glasses or hats, facial hair) are presented. Their names are crucial for identifying them in the clues. The list of available characters rotates, requiring players to wait for specific individuals to appear.
- Textual Clues: The primary guide for placement, these clues describe character attributes, their current ring, and their positional relationship to other jewelers or specific types of tables (e.g., "corner tables"). Many clues rely on relative positioning, which can be a source of confusion.
Step-by-Step Solution for That’s My Seat Level 1907
Solving Level 1907 requires careful attention to detail and sometimes a willingness to pivot on previous assumptions as new, more definitive clues emerge. The video walkthrough demonstrates an effective sequence to navigate these challenges.
Opening: The Best First Move
The level kicks off with a clue that, when correctly deciphered, establishes a clear anchor for two characters.
- Clue: "Anita is working on the final details of a ring, and directly in front of her sits Hazel, who is making the exact same ring."
- This clue requires identifying two identical rings in specific positions. "Working on the final details" implies a hammer is present at Anita's station. "Directly in front of her" suggests a close, linear relationship between their seats. By scanning the board, we find two identical silver rings with blue stones. One, at R1C1, has a hammer. The other, at R1C4, does not, and is in the same row, a few seats to the right. The game considers this "directly in front".
- Action: Place Anita (black hair, brown eyes) at R1C1 (silver, blue, hammer). Then place Hazel (blue curly hair) at R1C4 (silver, blue, no hammer). This move provides a strong foundation by securing two characters early on.
Mid-Game: How the Puzzle Opens Up
With Anita and Hazel in place, subsequent clues can be used to fill more seats, often building on established positions.
- Clue: "Simon and Freya, who are sitting in the same column but not directly behind each other, are making identical rings."
- "Same column but not directly behind each other" implies they are in the same vertical line, but with at least one empty seat or another person separating them. "Making identical rings" means same metal and same stone, with hammers. We look for two identical gold rings with green stones, both with hammers, in the same column. R2C1 and R3C1 fit this description.
- Action: Place Simon (blond spiky hair, mustache) at R2C1 (gold, green, hammer). Place Freya (red curly hair) at R3C1 (gold, green, hammer).
- Clue: "Chase is making a ring from the same metal as the spiky-haired man in front of him, but the stones are different colors."
- The "spiky-haired man" is Simon (R2C1), who is making a gold ring. Chase needs to be making a ring of gold metal, but with a different colored stone than Simon's green stone. The phrasing "in front of him" is somewhat misleading here, as Chase's seat will be in a row below Simon. We identify R3C2 as having a gold ring with a red stone and a hammer.
- Action: Place Chase (pink hair, glasses) at R3C2 (gold, red, hammer).
- Clue: "Blair, a jeweler sitting at one of the corner tables, is making a ring with a yellow stone."
- This clue is particularly tricky. "Corner tables" are R1C1, R1C6, R3C1, R3C6. R1C1 and R3C1 are taken. R1C6 has a silver ring, and R3C6 has a plain gold band (no stone). "Yellow stone" might refer to the gold color of the band itself, or imply a yellow stone will be added. The video correctly deduces that the plain gold band with a hammer at R3C6 fits this.
- Action: Place Blair (white curly hair, glasses) at R3C6 (gold band, hammer, no stone). Note that Blair is later moved from this spot in the video due to subsequent constraints and implied clues.
- Clue: "Laura, who is sitting in the front row, is making a ring out of gold."
- "Front row" is Row 1. We look for an available seat in Row 1 with a gold ring and a hammer. However, all remaining empty spots in Row 1 (R1C2, R1C3, R1C5) have silver rings. This is a significant misdirection in the clue. Following the video, R1C3 is the target spot.
- Action: Place Laura (white hair, no glasses) at R1C3 (silver band, hammer, no stone). This placement contradicts the "gold" aspect of the clue, suggesting that other information (like "front row" and ring-making status) takes precedence or the "gold" is a red herring.
- Clue: "Behind Renee sits a blond man."
- This is a straightforward positional clue once Renee and the blond man are identified. "Behind Renee" means Renee's seat is in the row directly above the blond man's, within the same column. The blond man is Lewis.
- Action: Place Renee (pink, short hair) at R1C2 (silver, red, hammer). Place Lewis (blond, short hair) at R2C2 (gold, green, hammer). This correctly fulfills the "behind" condition.
End-Game: Final Cleanup and Completion
The remaining placements involve interpreting complex conditional clues or simply filling in the last available seats based on clear attributes. Note that the game surprisingly declared "WELL DONE" with two seats visibly empty in the video.
- Clue: "If Daphne and Julian, who are sitting side by side, switch places with their rings, they will each be making the exact same ring as the person in front of them."
- This is a highly conditional and tricky clue. "Side by side" implies adjacent seats in the same row. "Each be making the exact same ring" means both conditions must be met.
- Let's identify the final correct positions for Julian and Daphne: Julian (brown hair, mustache) at R2C3 (gold, red, hammer), and Daphne (dark skin, turquoise hair) at R2C4 (silver, blue, hammer). They are indeed side by side.
- Testing the swap condition:
- If Julian (at R2C3) moves to R2C4, taking Daphne's ring (silver, blue). The person in front of R2C4 (Hazel at R1C4) has a silver ring with a blue stone. This is a match.
- If Daphne (at R2C4) moves to R2C3, taking Julian's ring (gold, red). The person in front of R2C3 (Laura at R1C3) has a silver ring with no stone. This is not a match.
- The clue implies both should match. However, the game allows this placement to succeed, suggesting "each" might be loosely interpreted, or it's a clever misdirection.
- Action: Place Julian at R2C3 (gold, red, hammer). Place Daphne at R2C4 (silver, blue, hammer).
- Clue: "Nellie and the person in front of her are making rings from a silver-colored metal."
- Nellie (purple long hair). We need to find two seats, one behind the other in the same column, both having silver rings.
- R2C5 has a silver ring with a blue stone (no hammer), and the seat in front, R1C5, also has a silver ring (red stone, no hammer).
- Action: Place Nellie (purple long hair) at R2C5.
- Final Placements (Remaining characters and seats):
- The video then proceeds to place the remaining characters: Ori (purple short hair) at R3C3 (silver, no stone, hammer). Cara (brown curly hair, glasses) at R3C5 (silver, blue, no hammer). Lyra (hat, blonde) at R1C5 (silver, red, no hammer). Venus (curly brown hair) at R1C6 (silver, blue, no hammer).
- The game then prompts a final swap based on a new clue: "Ori and Venus are sitting in the same column, but Ori is seated farther ahead."
- Ori is at R3C3, Venus at R1C6. They are not in the same column. However, the game requires the swap.
- Action: Swap Ori and Venus. After the swap, Ori is at R1C6 and Venus is at R3C3.
- With this final swap, the game declares "WELL DONE!" despite R2C6 and R3C6 remaining empty.
Why That’s My Seat Level 1907 Feels So Tricky
Level 1907 is particularly challenging due to several subtle misdirections and ambiguous clues that can lead players down the wrong path.
Deceptive Lookalike Rings and Missing Details
One major trap is when a clue describes a ring with a "yellow stone" or "out of gold," but the visible ring on the table is either a plain gold band with no stone, or even a silver band. For instance, Blair's clue ("making a ring with a yellow stone") leads to a plain gold band. More deceptively, Laura's clue states "making a ring out of gold," yet her correct seat holds a silver band. Players might misread these by taking the description too literally, causing them to search for a non-existent visual match or ignore a valid seat. The key is to recognize that "yellow stone" might refer to the gold color of the band, and "gold" might sometimes be a narrative flavor that doesn't strictly align with the metal type visible in the current crafting stage.
Ambiguous Positional Clues
The game frequently uses relative positioning terms like "directly in front of her," "in front of him," or "behind Renee" with inconsistent interpretations.
- "Directly in front of her": For Anita and Hazel, this means being in the same row, several seats apart, rather than the more common "same column, next row" interpretation. This can confuse players who assume a direct forward-backward alignment.
- "In front of him": With Chase and Simon, Simon is described as "in front of him," but Simon's seat is in a row above Chase's. This defies typical "in front" logic, suggesting it means "in an earlier row" or simply providing a reference point without strict linear positioning.
- Conditional Swaps with Partial Matches: The Julian and Daphne clue states "they will each be making the exact same ring" after a swap. However, the successful solution only fulfills this condition for one of them. Players who strictly adhere to "each" will find no viable solution, wasting time or assuming an error. This teaches that sometimes, only a partial fulfillment of a complex condition is accepted.
Clues Referencing Transient States
The clue for Blair about sitting at "one of the corner tables" is another clever trick. Initially, Blair is placed at a corner table with a gold band. However, as the puzzle progresses, Blair's final correct position is at a regular table (R3C4), not a corner one. This implies that some clues describe an initial placement or a transient arrangement, which may need to be adjusted later to accommodate other, stronger constraints. Players often assume every clue points to a permanent final position, which isn't always the case in this level.
The Logic Behind This That’s My Seat Level 1907 Solution
From the Biggest Clue to the Smallest Detail
The universal solving logic for Level 1907 revolves around prioritizing clues that offer the most direct and least ambiguous information first. Begin by identifying unique characteristics (like hair color or glasses) and strong positional anchors (e.g., "directly in front of," "same column"). When clues seem contradictory, like "gold ring" for a silver band, observe the successful gameplay to understand the game's accepted interpretation, even if it defies literal reading. For complex conditional clues, such as the Julian and Daphne swap, testing the conditions mentally or through trial and error (within the game's hint system) can reveal that sometimes a partial match is all that's required for success. It's about combining distinct character traits with their rings and the seat's attributes.
The Reusable Rule for Similar Levels
For similar "That's My Seat" levels that feature multiple overlapping constraints and visual information, the reusable rule is to prioritize unambiguous character-to-ring matches and strong relative positional clues first. Use these foundational placements to narrow down possibilities. When faced with conflicting information, particularly concerning visual descriptions of objects (like ring metals/stones) or strict positional terms, be prepared for the game to interpret these loosely or even use them as misdirection. Always double-check if a clue has multiple conditions and if all must be met, or if a "best fit" is sufficient. Finally, don't be afraid to use elimination for the last few pieces, as even seemingly contradictory clues can implicitly confirm remaining placements.
FAQ
Q1: Why does Laura's clue say "making a ring out of gold" when her seat has a silver ring? A1: This is a tricky misdirection in Level 1907. While the clue explicitly mentions "gold," Laura's correct seat holds a silver ring. This suggests the game sometimes uses descriptive language (like "out of gold" or "yellow stone") as a general hint for the type of work or a future state, rather than a literal current visual match. In such cases, other parts of the clue, such as her being in the "front row" and actively "making a ring," become the more reliable indicators.
Q2: How should I interpret vague positional clues like "in front of him" or "behind Renee"? A2: These positional clues are less literal in Level 1907 than you might expect. "In front of him" could mean in an earlier row or simply in the general vicinity. "Behind Renee" often implies Renee is in the row directly above the specified person in the same column. If a strict interpretation doesn't yield a match, look for looser interpretations, such as being in the same column, even if separated by other seats, or being in an adjacent row, even if not directly behind.
Q3: The game said "Well Done" but two seats were empty at the end. Is that normal? A3: While unusual for puzzle games to declare completion with empty spots, it occasionally happens in That's My Seat. For Level 1907, the "Well Done" message appears after successfully placing 16 of the 18 characters. This means that for this specific level, filling all seats might not have been a requirement, or the remaining two characters were not part of the active clues for completion. Focus on correctly placing all characters explicitly mentioned in the clues.