Great post. May I suggest to also bring a talking dog. And maybe some meddlesome teens.

THE DESTRUCTION ROOM
If you are looking for a rage room to go break stuff, The Destruction Room in Virginia Beach is the place the place to go.
Great post. May I suggest to also bring a talking dog. And maybe some meddlesome teens.
Q: What is this “My Little Pony” thing?
A: It’s a kids cartoon that teaches that friendship is magic. Adult fans are super smug woke-r than thou types who revels in their own moral superiority. I only know about it because I’m into escape rooms and in one forum, it was mentioned that MLP had mentioned them.
This.
It can get a bit chaotic at times, and every time I’ve been in a team that got stuck it was because no one knew the full list of items and clues that the team currently had – that some info was being hoarded.
Here’s one such company that has locations across the US.
I always have a good time at these. If you’re into puzzle type video games like Myst or The Room it’s like playing a live version.
I’ve never been to one, but I suspect I wouldn’t enjoy it as much as I could, because I’d be thinking too outside-of-the-box. If I have a choice between solving a rebus to get the combination to a lock, or whatever, or using my Swiss army knife to unscrew the lock from the thing it’s attached to, I’m going to want to choose the latter.
Wow. Thanks for all the informative answers. Ignorance (mine) mightily fought today.
Ditto me. I do the NYTimes Wordle, Connections, and Mini Crossword every day at 9 pm, and that’s the extent of my gaming and my interest in gaming.
I do keep a jigsaw puzzle going here at The Home. Different people work on it at different times, but I buy them and I spend the most time on them. While listening to an audiobook. Did I meantion I’m not much of a team player? Puzzle table in the hall outside my apartment at The Home:
This sounds like a fabulous idea! You’re so smart!
This is a new HBO series, isn’t it? I think I’ve seen the previews.
I vote for a shape-shifting female Alien.
If I have a choice between solving a rebus to get the combination to a lock, or whatever, or using my Swiss army knife to unscrew the lock from the thing it’s attached to, I’m going to want to choose the latter.
Or just a sledgehammer.
Or just a sledgehammer.
Those are destruction rooms. AKA rage rooms. Down the hall in 12A*.
If you are looking for a rage room to go break stuff, The Destruction Room in Virginia Beach is the place the place to go.
Now THAT appeals! More so these days than ever before…
Thanks for the Monty Python chuckle.
Really good ones do reward “outside of the box” thinking. By declaring yourself too smart for an escape room you might be missing out on a lot of fun.
They are a fad form of entertainment for people self-assured of their own cleverness, much like pub/bar quiz games.
Fad? I’ve had a kid, raised her and she’s flown the nest between my first and most recent escape room experience.
That jigsaw puzzle fad is going to fade any time now, I suppose.
Any hobby or pastime that I don’t personally do, is a silly thing for dumb people.
Here is a link to a YouTube playlist from the Geek & Sundry channel, featuring celebrities (for certain values of “celebrity”) taking part in fairly basic escape rooms. It should give you at least a bit of a feel for what they’re like.
I got yelled at the last time i did an escape room. With any newly popular thing, there are good ones (really good, high production value, super thoughtful puzzles) and more slapdash efforts.
My team at work did a couple a few years ago as something to do instead of just hitting a bar on the company dime. The second one we did I would have rated 3.6 roentgen, not terrible but not great. Once we realized it was not the immersive experience of the first go-round, frustration started to rise. The call of free drinks at the bar began to overwhelm our shared sense of purpose.
I realized that everything we were doing was meant to provide us pieces of the code for a combination lock that was the last element of the puzzle. A really cheap combination lock. So I drifted over to it, put pressure on the hasp, and spun the dials until I had felt each of the discs align.
I shouted out, “Hey guys, the final lock code is 2734! Should we just open it and get out of here?” Our battle scarred senior PM took charge as she typically did and said, “Open the goddamned thing. I need a drink.”
The monitor that has been looking at he phone in the corner of the room laid into me. “How do you know that? You can’t know that yet!” I told her, “It’s a puzzle. The lock is a puzzle. I opened it.”
She tried to tell us we hadn’t won. That we didn’t do it right. Piss on that. We got out of there and got to drinking.
Any hobby or pastime that I don’t personally do, is a silly thing for dumb people.
It wouldn’t be the Dope otherwise.
They are a fad form of entertainment for people self-assured of their own cleverness, much like
…the SDMB?
…the SDMB?
The faddishness of which dated from about 1999 to 2005.
I love Escape rooms. They’re great fun. Just two rules to remember:
Make sure you don’t pick a room that’s too difficult for you. The hard ones tend to be very hard in my experience, so if you’ve not done one before then pick an easy or medium one.
Typically, you’ll get a certain number of hints. Don’t be too proud to use them. A lot of teams fail because they don’t use the hints they’re given. My rule of thumb is if your team hasn’t made any progress in five minutes, use a hint.
I’ve done two with my wife, daughter and son-in-law. The first one we smashed. The second, not so much. It helps to have a range of talents on the team.
We’ve also played some escape room kits, kind of like a board game. Not as much fun as a real one but cheaper and you can do it at home.
The first one we smashed.
Literally?
Escape rooms are a lot of fun. They do reuse a lot of mechanics so your first game is likely to be significantly harder than your 2nd-Nth games. Lots of opening locks like thihttps://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/shopping?q=tbn:ANd9GcTJ1griYb1BfInKqVJtjT9UmLGPTJXNVzJpqxP-iQuXfgNtJxLHCcRsvwTI5LrCVOV3UB4K5lHsBsd9JDDB6UWCPWRR3MRLLLsm2ZaX5UfpzIumCCSOZKRhmQ based on a text clue that leads you to count the number of objects in paintings in a certain order.
To me team work is something I do because I have to, not something I would choose to do for fun. So pass.
(I don’t think it’s dumb at all, just not my cuppa)