My First Escape Room!
Before Sean left, we all did an escape room together... It pretty much inspired this entire video.
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Woman thanks friends after being dragged through ‘haunted’ escape room in China
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A young woman found a “haunted” escape room in northwestern China’s Shaanxi province so terrifying that she fell to the floor. Yet her teammates refused to give up on her, and dragged her to the end.
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The escape room in Beijing part 1
CHINA: Mystery Rooms craze
Young people in China have taken to locking themselves into a room - just to amuse themselves. It's all part of a new gaming fad that lets them live out their fantasy. Channel NewsAsia's Valarie Tan reports from Shanghai.
Making computer games reality - trend for real life escape games
LEAD IN:
A new trend among youth in China is to be locked into a sealed room - and it's up to them and their wits to figure out how to get out.
STORYLINE:
The doors are locked and the clock is ticking.
A group of friends has only one hour to stop the doomsday plans of a mad scientist and, in the process, find their way out.
Saving the world is part of a typical Friday night at Omega Escape Room in Beijing. It's one of numerous businesses in China that have sprung up to provide a popular new form of entertainment.
Players are locked in and have to use clues and hints to solve brain-teasers in order to find their way out before time expires.
The game, known as takagism, grew out of a Japanese computer game where players must discover the way out of sealed rooms.
Now Chinese entrepreneurs like Toby Chen, co-owner of Omega Escape Room, have taken the game off computer screens and into the real world.
We play the games on the computer, we click the screen and find the elements or clues to solve the puzzles, but it's just all virtual stuff. And in 2012 we heard there is a TV show in Japan about room escape, but it's just for TV, not for real, not for a business, and from that time we are just wondering if we can create a real situation, a real circumstance, explains Chen.
It's proving to be a huge success in China. Chen and his partners own 18 different locations and employ a staff of a dozen engineers and designers to regularly come up with fresh puzzles.
In the mad scientist's lair, the players are just trying to figure out where to start.
They pore over a stack of clues, flip switches, and shine flashlights into dark corners. They debate over the meaning of a clue.
Nothing seems to be working. Finally, a series of plastic pipes slides back to reveal a narrow, flooded corridor. But it, too, ends in a locked grate.
Player Hua Yang says he enjoys the challenge.
I think the game is unusual. And it is also fresh and new to me. The mental workout is hectic! Um�yeah, hectic, indeed! The moments when we solved the puzzles are most exciting for us. We enjoy the game a lot.
The riddle of the corridor solved, the players move onto the next room - the mad scientist's laboratory.
They crawl one by one through a small circular opening. A glass tube with a pair of skulls glows neon green in the darkness.
Despite the eerie surroundings, player Jiajing Hou isn't fazed.
The game won't be difficult even to children who are equipped with good knowledge and are able to intelligently follow the adults. Even for expectant mothers like me, the game isn't a challenge. I think the players can learn a lot while playing the game, Hou says.
The players flip a joystick and press buttons while looking at a series of cryptic clues. Test tubes and scientific gear line a cabinet and shelves in the room.
The players work together, discussing ideas and trying different solutions. It's a group spirit that owner Chen likes to see.
I think in urban cities, just like in Beijing, the life can be very stressed. If they're working very hard, they try to find something like not only to entertain him or herself, but to find a way to communicate with others. To find something they can work together, they can solve together, and communicate in a way that they have a common purpose, they have a puzzle or a challenge to solve together. So this is not something they can actually achieve in urban cities, he says.
Eventually the players find the right answer and uncover a key to move on to the fourth and final room. A bookshelf full of books and a table strewn with papers and a brightly lit periodic table of elements seem to hold the key to their escape.
The players sift through the stack of sheets and peer at the periodic table.
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Modern Chinese House Escape Video Walkthrough
Modern Chinese House Escape is another new point and click room escape game from games2rule.com. In this game you came to see a Modern Chinese House. After spending few minutes you decided to move. But you came to know that someone trapped you inside that Modern Chinese House. You forget the way to exit. No one is there to help you out. You have to escape from there by finding useful objects, hints and solving puzzle. Try to find the key of the door. Click on the objects to interact with them and solve simple puzzles. Good Luck Have Fun!
Wow Traditional Chinese House Escape Walkthrough [WowEscape]
Wow Traditional Chinese House Escape Walkthrough [WowEscape]
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Escape room China town oct 16
1606 Escape Room Shanghai
Room escape: New kind of entertainment gains popularity
Room escape. The phrase might sound unfamiliar to some, but it's a new entertainment business that's growing in popularity. It's good fun, good exercise, and it's good business.
Vlog 53: Filming Beijing, Wuzhen, Hangzhou, Xi'an, Huaibei, Shanghai
In Beijing we stayed with my mum’s best friend from university. Back in 1981 they were bunk buddies living 6 to a room. I decided the next time I were to visit China, I wouldn't be bother to adjust my jet lag. I would be up at 4AM to see the sunrise, I would stand in Tiananmen Square at 5AM to see the national flag rise, I would line up for 3 hours to be the first to walk into the Forbidden City at 8AM, and like an empress from the Ming Dynasty (1668-1644 AD) I would dance through the palace courts. Our visit to the 798 Art Zone struck a chord in me. Two galleries were particularly memorable. The Miss Dior gallery exhibited silhouettes nipped-in at the waist, fabrics falling at mid-calf length, and the growth of the Miss Dior perfume. The second exhibit that had me awestruck was a bamboo & ink exhibition. The theme of the gallery was Mind Deconstruction, illustrated by poems of calligraphy on rice paper. The last night we were in Beijing we were with two of my mum’s old friends and we walked the perimeter of the Forbidden City. Their eyes were bright as they laughed about the past. I looked up at the stone wall surrounding the Forbidden City and it was spooky to think about the Emperors of the Ming and the Qing (1368-1911 AD) that live within the palace walls and the soldiers that paced the path we strolled. It was a night of shenanigans. We removed traffic cones to illegally park our car, trespassed a restricted area, scaled the moat wall, got caught by a guard and then all got some popsicles to eat.
In Wuzhen we arrived at a cute motel, the interior was designed for an escape in Greece but a glimpse outside the blue tile walls you saw nothing but honking cars on the cracked concrete road. Traditional local-styled dwellings lined the canals. Wuzhen is nicknamed the “Venice of the East”. In the evening the rain started to pour, and Mum and I huddled under an umbrella and walked for hours between the waterfront houses. The evening lights were dimly lit and set tranquil slippery stone path aglow. The next morning, at 5AM, street canvassers had lined their trucks full of fruit on the road in front of our motel. I sleepily made a note to visit the produce at a more reasonable hour, but when I woke again at 8AM, they had already left.
Our friends lent us the keys to their apartment in the Xixi National Wetland Park in Hangzhou. The infrastructure was modern and I spent my morning run weaving through the beautifully eerie marble architecture. Mum and I took a bus to see the vivid city lights and West Lake. We left Hangzhou via bullet train which reached operational speeds of up to 380 km/h.
Mum and I arrived in Xi’an in the evening and we saw the incandesce of the Bell Tower and Drum Tower. Strolling through the Muslim quarter at night was like strolling through your average night market, but on MDMA. Our family friends from Xi’an brought the things I studied in my Chinese Archaeology class to life, such as Emperor Qin Shi Huang’s Terracotta Army. Apart from sight seeing, Mum and I were treated to carbilicious meals, drizzled in oils and sprinkled with various spices. We rolled out of Xi’an feeling fatter than the noodles we ate.
The ultimate destination of this trip was my mom’s hometown of Huaibei. The contrast of coming to a smaller city was larger than I had imagined. There lacked a sense of structure and I stood back timidly while listening to locals holler with thick accents. I was amused to watch my mum, normally soft spoken, conjure up an attitude while speaking. During my strolls I would continuously get lost in the maze of alleyways. Between the pale yellow apartments and dusty cement roads, I found myself enjoying the patterns of fabrics hung out to dry and the bright red paper banners pasted from door to door. In the morning, street food lined the sidewalks. In the evening, men crowded over games of chess. I grew familiar to the nature of the locals, their direct way of speaking made it seem like we were all closely acquainted. Normally not used to the company of extended family, my assembly of aunts and uncles always leave me pleasantly astonished by their unconditional care.
In Shanghai the subway was a breeze to navigate and Mum and I slipped beneath the underground system. In the Shanghai Museum I ogled at the collection of artifacts. The PowerPoint slides I spent meticulously memorizing in Early Chinese Art History were tangible behind the glass display cases. In the evening the air cooled as the neon lights warmed, with the windows down, my uncle took us out for a ride.Life moves at a faster pace on this side of the world. The last time I touched down in Shanghai, I met with my cousin who just started working there. Fast forward four years later, he has his own apartment, a beautiful wive, and an adorable baby. We reminisced about when we were 2 wild children running through water fountains.He has long since left that game and now there's only 1 of us that remains.
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In Beijing
My (failed) attempt to master a traditional Chinese game...
In Beijing (April 2009).
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Chinese game company brings excitement to New York
You are locked in a room. There are clues scattered around, and a timer ticking. You have only 70 minutes to escape. But don’t worry. This is just a game. The excitement of escaping imprisonment is brought by a Chinese company, take a look.
SquiddyPlays - POOPIN' IN CHINA! - There's Poop In My Soup! [2]
Hello Everybody! Welcome back to SquiddyPlays! Today I am checking out a game called 'There's Poop In My Soup' if you don't know a lot about this game let me explain: Have you ever wanted to poop on people but were too shy to just go for it? There's poop in my soup lets you do just that, poop in soups, poop on people, poop on poodles, poop anywhere you please, from the streets of New York to Paris to Beijing. Poop on everybody.
Enjoy!
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