Mark as done to rate
In the late 19th century, during an ill-fated Halloween service, the deranged minister of Crickley Church decided to kill his entire congregation after their confessions had convinced his twisted mind that they had, among themselves, committed the 7 Deadly Sins. In order to punish them for their sins, the evil minister passed around poisoned bread and wine. As the congregation choked on their last breaths, the minister incited a curse on the children playing in the rooms beneath the church, and then buried himself alive in the church’s hidden crypt, determined to haunt the church forevermore. Your Great Grandfather was one of those innocent children. You began to think back on the mysterious deaths of family members and close friends ever since that fateful night. Not wishing to take on such a daunting task alone, you have convinced your bravest friends to race to Crickley with you, break into the abandoned Church and find the hidden crypt. You enter the churchyard at 11 pm and the iron gates immediately slam shut behind you, locking you inside. The minister seems to be playing one last trick on you. Can you complete your mission and escape the church before the clock strikes Midnight? Or will you fulfill the curse and your name be the next on a headstone in your family’s graveyard plot? Find the hidden crypt, find the dagger, and drive it through the heart of the evil minister. Then and only then you will be saved and will destroy the curse forever. Be brave... Stay calm... Work together... But remember... Time is of the essence...
34 escape rooms
very good room. good puzzles. some scares (with noise and fog) but that’s about it and i’m a chicken
Hard
52 escape rooms
The room itself was well-themed… this location is great with using details to create an immersive environment. There are a few special effects (loud noises, fog, flashing lights) but nothing too scary. A few of the puzzles had obtuse elements that we wouldn’t have figured out without a hint. However, the GM kept posting hints without being asked. We’re expert-level solvers and it was a bit deflating to start noodling on a puzzle only to have the screen ping with clear and detailed instructions for how to solve it. I suspect they’re overcompensating for the abstract and difficult elements. If you’re experts, remind your GM ahead of time to hold off on hints until you ask.
75 escape rooms
Fun game only negative is the game master gave unwanted clues & hints. Medium difficulty
120 escape rooms
A couple of these puzzles are so extremely abstract that I don’t think I would have figured them out without a hint. Some of the puzzles are very cool though. If you don’t like unsolicited hints, make sure you let your game master know, ours gave hints without us asking for them:
29 escape rooms
This room is probably the most difficult room I’ve done. If you’re fine with asking for hints it’s doable, but some of the details and clues throughout the room are extremely subtle and vague. Overall I enjoyed it but it’s definitely not for beginners or the easily frustrated. Some of the solutions I would have never come up with on my own.
33 escape rooms
𓆜𓋘𓄁 𓊛𓇙𓋸𓌤𓌥 𓌦 𓅐𓆢 𓆣 𓀉𓆤 𓆥 𓅑𓆘 𓆙 𓅒𓄙 𓄚 𓄛 𓅓𓃺 𓃻 𓅔 𓅕 𓃕 𓃖 𓃗 𓎷 𓄁𓎸𓅖 𓅽 𓅾 𓅿𓅗 𓅘 𓇆 𓇇𓅙 𓅚 𓁵 𓁶𓂵 𓂶𓃝𓋲 𓋳𓀬 𓅛𓁃 𓂺𓅜 �𓅝𓃄 �𓄁𓅞𓂙 𓅟𓂿 𓆜𓋘𓄁 𓊛𓇙𓋸𓌤𓌥 𓌦 𓅐𓆢 𓆣 𓀉𓆤 𓆥 𓅑𓆘 𓆙 𓅒𓄙 𓄚 𓄛 𓅓𓃺 𓃻 𓅔 𓅕 𓃕 𓃖 𓃗 𓎷 𓄁𓎸𓅖 𓅽 𓅾 𓅿𓅗 𓅘 𓇆 𓇇𓅙 𓅚 𓁵 𓁶𓂵 𓂶𓃝𓋲 𓋳𓀬 𓅛𓁃 𓂺𓅜 𓂨𓅝𓃄 𓄁𓅞𓂙 𓅟𓂿
Showing results 1-6 of 6