Reviews

Pudding Lane

Pudding Lane

Cronologic

  • Escape room
  • IRL
Avalanche

Avalanche

Maze Rooms - Robertson Blvd

  • Escape room
  • IRL
Demise of the Gricers

Demise of the Gricers

Entered

  • Escape room
  • IRL
Disparue [Missing]

Disparue [Missing]

Enigma-Tic

  • Escape room
  • IRL
The Crystal Maze Live Experience

The Crystal Maze Live Experience

The Crystal Maze Live Experience

  • Escape room
  • Other
Note that this is not an escape room. It’s a recreation of the UK TV show The Crystal Maze, which is escape room-adjacent. Basically, it’s a collection of individual challenges, many of which are similar to things you might do in an escape room. Pros: •Fun, and does a great job of capturing the TV experience. •Some of the games are fun and elaborate. • Great maze master who was funny and positive and (I’m pretty sure) subtly gave the kids in our party extra time on their games to stop them from being discouraged. • Many games gave all team members the chance to participate by shouting suggestions, even if they weren’t the official player. Cons: • Very expensive— twice the price of a standard London escape room. I get why: real estate in Picadilly Circus must be insanely expensive, plus they have to pay for the licensing fees. But from a consumer point of view, it was twice the price I’ve paid for equivalent entertainment. • Some of the games are simplistic — think traveling carnival level. • They are really insistent that you bring a full team of 8; if you don’t, there’s a very good chance your team will get broken up and you won’t get to play together. With a total of 16 games, that means each person only gets to be the star of 2 games. • Difficulty of games is extremely unpredictable and you don’t get to see the game before assigning the player, so you can’t really assign people to their strong suits. This is entirely authentic to the TV show but it can make for a frustrating experience. OVERALL: If you’re a fan of the TV show and you feel the price is a fair one for a chance to live out the experience, go for it. But if you’ve got a fixed entertainment budget and you just want the greatest bang for your immersive entertainment buck, you’re probably better off with a trip to one of London’s many high quality escape rooms (eg Cluequest, Escape Plan, or the Game Is Now, to name a few.)
Avalanche

Avalanche

Maze Rooms - Robertson Blvd

  • Escape room
  • IRL
First off, shame on Maze Rooms for spamming the Morty reviews of this game. There are multiple reviews praising this game in similarly vague (and in some cases word-for-word identical) language. They’re generally written by people who haven’t reviewed a single other game— or who, coincidentally, have only reviewed other Maze Room games in very similar language. It makes me sad to see an escape room company abusing the trust and good will of the community, and it makes me reluctant to go back to Maze Rooms. Putting that aside, this was a vexing and perplexing game. Maze Room have clearly devoted real care into set design; the set pulls one trick in particular that was truly impressive. But they’ve skimped in weird ways. Hints are delivered through a walkie-talkie— and if you leave the walkie talkie in the wrong place, it ends up being inaccessible for the rest of the game, which means you can’t get hints. Plus, in a later room, doing the wrong thing to one prop renders it unusable, making it impossible to solve a particular puzzle. If you scroll down past the numerous spam reviews of this game, you’ll notice a lot of complaints about the room’s disjointed storyline. I think I understood what Maze Room were going for, and I appreciate the fact that they were trying something different, but the story just isn’t conveyed in an effective way. In short, this is a game with a lot of intriguing and promising elements, and is worth playing if you want to try something different and you don’t mind the potential for frustration. But it’s a severely flawed game, and I left feeling defeated even though we managed to escape in time.
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