Billionaire Bullying Continues!
Billionaire Elon Musk continues his relentless campaign of bullying against billionaire Mark Zuckerberg.
Not a front for a secret organization.
Written by Rob Schultz (human).
Billionaire Elon Musk continues his relentless campaign of bullying against billionaire Mark Zuckerberg.
I feel like I just can't overstate how much I think that if you have an improv team, and that team needs a coach, you would be unable to do one fluid ounce of wrong by hiring Ric Rosario to coach that team.
He's been doing improv for a decade! He's been on house teams and main stages all over town! He's generous, he's gregarious, he's downright affable. When I'm talking to audiences here in Los Angeles, whether or not they know what or even who I'm talking about, I always tell them to remember the name: Ric Rosario. Very funny, very affordable.
One Saturday night with nothing much going on, with our usual room escape partners on vacation, we looked online, saw there was an escape room that nobody had booked any tickets for starting in an hour, and raced across town to a terrific adventure as a duo!
Company: Exit Game
Room: The Lab
Date Played: 8/20/16
Player Count: 2
Success: Failure, but only barely. No hints.
Premise: I can't really say. I know it was vaguely Area 51 themed, but I'm not 100% sure who we were supposed to be or what exactly we were officially trying to do. Get in the room and then escape from it, I guess!
Immersion: Just enough to be fun. This was by far the biggest space we've been in, and the game took full advantage of it. Probably none of the objects in the room would really make sense in a military installation, but this game is immersive in the way a game of Laser Tag is immersive. Speaking of which, our flashlights were mounted on rubber handguns. We took two each!
Highlights: The space. It's really satisfying to get to move around as the game progresses instead of rotating to face the next wall of a small room. The watchword for the whole experience was "satisfying." There's a really well-designed part that punishes players if they choose to act like jerks or rewards them if they don't. Since I considered the jerk behavior and then decided against it, this made me very happy.
The hint system was a button at the beginning of the game. Since this was a kind of spread-out area, the one time we were ready to press the button, it required us to backtrack through the space and we stumbled over the clue we were missing. No more need for a hint!
In my last review, The Will took top prize for best game intro. A week later, this one is taking the prize for best explanation of the rules. We were shown a video with some decent production value, decent jokes, and a good explanation of what's what.
Lowlights: We got to the final puzzle but didn't actually escape. Either we missed the clue for the finale, or it's significantly more abstract than every single thing that came before it. When someone came to get us at the end, it seemed that either they weren't our GM, or if they were, they weren't really watching us.
And Finally: Of the escape room companies we've visited, Exit Game seemed the most like a real business. Our host, Remy, was far and away the most professional host we've encountered so far. There's a large lobby for some reason, even though there doesn't seem to be anything to do there, and there's a photo station that automatically emails you your photo after you take it. My earlier comparison to a Laser Tag... game? arena? parlor? Place you play laser tag, is probably apt here. It doesn't feel like a startup or someone's hobby.
This room says it can take 10 or 12 players at once. That seems like a crazy amount. We breezed through most of it with only 2 of us. With 3 or 4, I'm sure we would have had enough extra eyes and hands to escape. With 12... by the time everyone travels from one area to another, whoever's in the lead would already be done and on to the next space. We didn't get out, but it felt like we saw everything, and my overall feelings toward this one are very positive. Since we're sort of new to escape rooms, it's great every time we enter one that's unlike anything we've seen before.
I recently discovered bestlaescaperooms.com, and I'm delighted to see this is their least favorite room at this location, because it was great fun. I'm looking forward to bringing more people and checking out The AI and the Sorcery School. Out of 6 rooms played, I'm ranking this one #2.
How to book this room yourself: Visit http://www.theexitgame.com/m2-ch6g
Okay, the idea of ranking the escape rooms we visit is going to become unmanageable very quickly, but this is the post that will be continually updated with the scoreboard.
This scoreboard is the list of escape rooms I've played, from most favorite to least. As it grows, it gets reshuffled based on the wind.
This is a completely subjective list that shows what game I would most like to play as of the last time I revised it . It's what I would want, if I were searching the internet for reviews.
Click on the names to read the reviews and find out what I liked, didn't like, or learned about myself at each game.
Unless otherwise noted, all of the games on this list are located in the broadly-defined Los Angeles area.
This section is for boxed games you can play at home, and maybe eventually VR or video games that are like room escapes.
A
B
C
D
F
"It's time to check in with my co-producer Rob Schultz, up in the booth. Rob, how's it going up there?"
"Hello Jason! I'm glad you asked! It's a balmy 75 degrees outside, a saucy 69 degrees inside, and an unbelievable 85 degrees up here in the booth. Traffic is looking pretty good except for a slight fender bender in the right lane on Santa Monica Blvd. eastbound, which is backing up traffic to the 101, from the 101 to the 5, and from the 5 to Sacramento! My name's Rob Schultz, and that's your made-up traffic and weather on the sevens! Now back to the show!"