Guide to escape rooms in Europe

This guide was written in 2017, and hasn’t had a major update since 2018-19. A lot has changed since then! I’ve left it up for reference and historical interest but it’s no longer very useful as a guide. Instead, try:

  • Search for the country you’re interested in via the search box on this site (especially for the UK, Germany, Austria and Switzerland, but we also have more or less complete listings for the Czech Republic, Hungary, Scandinavia, Ireland, Portugal, the Baltics and the Balkans)
  • For France: The Escapers
  • For the Netherlands and Belgium: Escape Talk
  • For Poland: Lockme.pl
  • For most of the escape room hotspots in Europe: the ranked playlists on EscapeRoomers.de
  • To find the very best rooms available: the TERPECA awards

Being A Partial, Fragmentary and Unreliable Collection of Escape Room Recommendations
That I’ve Mostly Swiped From Other People.

Europe has a thriving, complex escape scene, and the games I’ve played myself around various European cities are only a tiny fraction of the games available. So the information here is based on recommendations from other enthusiasts, reviewers and owners, in many cases taken from the Escape Room Enthusiasts group on Facebook, plus links to relevant review and directory sites.

Where an area is well covered by local blogs and directory sites, I’ve linked straight through to those; where suggestions come from other sources I’ve attempted to combine them into a brief summary.

A lot of the information below is hearsay and should be taken with a large pinch of salt! If you have any strong recommendations to add, or if you disagree with suggestions below, please comment or email me at escapethereview@outlook.com – I plan to update this page over time and will incorporate suggestions and feedback.

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Where should I go?

I originally wrote this article on the assumption that people would have a particular destination already in mind. But it seems there are some ultra-obsessed enthusiasts for whom quality of escape rooms is the most important factor when deciding where to go on holiday. If that’s you, then here’s a quick run-down of the most often recommended hotspots:

  • The Netherlands: arguably the densest concentration of escape game quality in Europe.
  • Barcelona: until recently relatively undiscovered by enthusiasts outside the country, Barcelona is the hub of the thriving and innovative escape room industry in Spain.
  • Athens: with a host of remarkably elaborate games, many significantly longer than 60 minutes, the Greek capital is one of the top destinations for games. Horror themes and live actors are common, but even if you avoid the scary games there’s plenty to blow you away.
  • Hamburg and/or Berlin: many good games and some that are among the best worldwide.
  • Budapest: the original escape room capital of Europe, you can find better games elsewhere but Budapest still has plenty to pick from.
  • Prague: another beautiful tourist city famous for escape rooms, Prague’s best games are outstanding.
  • Moscow: the Russian escape room scene is legendary for sophistication, for variety, and for offering experiences that couldn’t exist anywhere else – though many aren’t accessible unless you have a Russian speaker with you.
  • Sofia: the Bulgarian capital is way off the beaten track for many players, but the quantity and quality of its games mean it deserves much more attention than it gets in the English-speaking enthusiast community.

Naturally, there are a great many other cities with lots of excellent games, more than enough to keep most enthusiasts happy while visiting!

Top Escape Rooms Project (TERPECA winners)

One of the very first places you should be looking to find good games is the Top Escape Rooms Project. This annual awards list combines the game rankings of the Western world’s most experienced enthusiasts, via some sophisticated mathematics, into a single list of top games worldwide. The result is far and away the most reliable ‚top games‘ list I’m currently aware of.

That’s reliable in the sense that you can count on all the highly-placed games being extraordinarily good; it may not include all the very best games in a region, since some may be too new to have been included. The project has successfully expanded its geographical coverage over the last few years, but some countries remain under-represented due to not being frequently visited by travelling enthusiasts. However, if you get a chance to play any game that’s won a TERPECA (Top Escape Rooms Project Enthusiasts‘ Choice Award) you should jump at it.

Rankings from well-travelled enthusiasts

The German enthusiast group EscapeRoomers.de have been energetically touring Europe’s top escape room cities and compiling rankings for their games, combining scores from various different enthusiasts. So far they’ve covered Athens, Austria, Barcelona, Berlin, Hamburg, Budapest, Prague and the Netherlands, giving a thorough run-down of the best games in each.

Their lists are available in PDF form, and we host a copy here; see also the Facebook group itself.

Room Escapers is a Spanish team and review blog; their Europe-wide favourite games list might be of interest.

Other general resources

On Facebook there’s the global enthusiasts group, which has more discussion of North American games than ones in Europe but is very active and full of helpful people. There’s also an active group for UK enthusiasts, and a Europe group which is less active but is usually prompt to help with questions.

More generally, viewing a location on TripAdvisor under ‚Things to Do‘ and filtering by Fun & Games -> Room Escape Games usually gives a more or less complete list of venues in a city or country. Reviews there are not always a very reliable guide to finding the best games, though looking for any that say the author has played a lot of games can work well.

There are a great many local review and directory sites, and all the ones I could find are listed below. These are often in the local language only, but can usually be navigated with a bit of help from browser auto-translate functionality.

There are also a number of international / global escape room directory sites. My experience of these is that they’re often too incomplete or out of date to be all that useful, but your mileage may vary.

Almost all games use a private booking system, with a flat fee for the game or a sliding scale based on the number of players. Games in west Europe and most places in the Euro zone most often range from £15 to £30 per person, and usually paid in advance through the website. Games further to the east are usually £8 to £20 per person, and usually paid for in cash after playing.

West Europe

Most of West Europe is pretty well served by review blogs and directory sites, and 🇫🇷 France is no exception. EscapeGame.fr (previously known as Escape Game Paris) has good coverage of not just Paris but several other French cities too, with easy to browse ratings. Le Meilleur Escape Game has a large number of game reviews for Paris and other major French cities; and Allo Escape has an excellent range of reviews for games in Paris and a dozen other locations around France, with top 10 lists for the capital and the country. You’ll also find what appears to be a very active French-language Facebook group.

Escape Game France has a directory of escape games sorted by region (look under ‚Ou jouer?‘ in the menu), as well as a good selection of reviews (under ‚Tests‘). We Escape has a recommended list though no reviews, but seems to provide the most complete list of French games, and allows direct booking. Other review bloggers you might like to check include OWAGEscape Game Blog; and Escape Blog.

And if you just want a single list of top games for Paris, Escape Room Tips (based in San Francisco, but with several reviews of Paris games) have put together a helpful spreadsheet of Paris game rankings, listing top games based on a combination of the ratings from Escape Game Paris and Escape Game France, plus their own scores. Personally I’ve played only in Paris and Lille – full review list here. You can also find plenty of Paris reviews on The Logic Escapes Me.

Of the Paris companies, The Game is famous for its games L’Avion and Le Metró, known for their authentic sets. Lock Academy is consistently good; you may see their game Très Cher Lock recommended most often, but I’d suggest picking their more recent games ahead of it. I really enjoyed Odyssey at La Pièce. Phobia (previously a branch of Claustrophobia) is a good choice for smaller teams, especially if you like scary rooms. There are a number of other well-reviewed horror games that I haven’t tried, such as at One Hour and Epsilon Escape.

One reader adds suggestions for Majestic Escape Game and for two games with live actors: Les Pirates Des Antilles at Kairos and The Cursed Crypt at Skeleton Key.

Note that while most games can be played in English, a good number are French only (including, last time I checked, all the games at Majestic and some of those at Lock Academy); others support English only with prior notice. If in doubt, contact the venue beforehand.

And of course there’s a lot more to the French scene than just Paris – the Top Escape Rooms Project includes nominees from Lyon and Bordeaux, and you’ll find plenty more suggestions on the French sites linked above.

🇲🇨 Monaco now has an escape room company named Iris Game, who currently have two rooms on offer.

For 🇩🇪 GermanyEscape Room Games is a good place to find lists of games by city, with some crowd-sourced game ratings. For enthusiast recommendations, try Escape Maniac and their top games list, as well as their map; and Room Escape 60. Other local resources include Escape Game (which has a list of games with crowd-sourced ratings for some, especially in Berlin), Escape Room Scout (see the links at the bottom of their home page for per-city listings, though I’m not sure what their ratings are based on), Exit-Game.info (a blog site of articles and news relating to escape games, which won’t particularly help you find games but has plenty of interesting writing on the topic), and Out Of Time, an Austrian blog with a few reviews for games in Germany.

While there’s a thriving escape scene through the country, Berlin is the obvious place to go, and whenever enthusiasts talk about the city, The Room gets rave recommendations and should probably be top of your list. Final Escape and House of Tales both have visually impressive games; Claustrophobia have three games here; and Exit have Huxley, perhaps the most advanced VR escape game currently available. Escape Maniac also recommend Cube’s Cabinet at Labyrintoom and Dictator Room at Escape Zone.

We have reviews of most of those here, and I found The Room’s Lost Treasure game lived up to its reputation. Escape Room Tourism visited Berlin in Jan 2016 and were highly enthusiastic about Cat In The Bag’s The Prison, specifically for a team of two (and also gave top marks to The Room and Escape Zone’s Dictator Room). Two Bears Life add recommendations for The Room, Cat In The Bag and Claustrophobia as well.

EscapeRoomers.de have a ranking list for almost 40 Berlin games; The Room take the top spots, and both Final Escape and Illuminati Escape place well too.

However, Berlin’s not the only hotspot. Hamburg’s Skurrilum took the top two places on Escape Maniac’s best games of 2016 list with their two Ernie Hudson rooms, and The Logic Escapes Me describes the same two games as the best they’ve ever played. I missed out on those two due to them not being available in English at the time, but the two others I’ve played at Skurrilum were both outstanding (reviews here). The Logic Escapes Me have a detailed round-up of a dozen venues in the city, and were impressed by a number of other games too. The ranking list from EscapeRoomers.de concurs with the recommendation for Skurrilum closely followed by Hidden In Hamburg.

I have less information about the rest of Germany. I’ve played only a small number of games in Munich, but a local enthusiast recommends both rooms at Hunt4Hint, as well as Alice and Tesla’s Mystery from international operators AdventureRooms and Fox in a Box respectively. Room Escape 60 recommend RoomEscape Frankfurt; and you’ll find a scattering of reviews for other places on Escape Maniac’s list. Joining the EscapeRoomers.de Facebook group may be a good way to get much more detailed suggestions.

🇨🇭 Switzerland’s games are most concentrated in Zurich and Geneva, with a dozen companies in each city. TripAdvisor will tell you there are also a couple of venues in Basel and Bern and another dozen venues scattered around the country, but that’s only a partial list: I’m aware of several more in the Alpine south around Sion (Charrat, Verbier, Ardon, Sierre) that aren’t on that list, and it looks like there are other omissions. Even so, the escaping scene seems less developed in Switzerland than in neighbouring France and Germany. You may also find it rather an expensive country for games.

If you’re in the French-speaking west of the country, Trip Trap in Geneva gets strong recommendations, especially Marie Laveau’s Mansion. I also noticed a vote of confidence for Roseville Escape in Vevey; and in the south, Escape World in Vernayez seems to have an intriguing setting in a mountain fort, with their large-team Fortress game taking place in genuine underground tunnels.

For the area around Zurich, EscapeRoomers.de have a ranking of 37 games. Top of the list is  Time Maze in Baden, which also gets a recommendation from German review blog Escape Maniac. Games in Zurich itself seem to get merely lukewarm recommendations, but ROOM appears to be another ex-Claustrophobia company so might be worth trying.

Switzerland is also home to the international franchise Adventure Rooms, who have branches in many Swiss cities, so if you’re interested in playing their games, you could try them in their home country.

There’s a complete list of games in 🇮🇪 Ireland at Exit Games. The country has gone from fourteen to twenty-eight venues over the last couple of years, so while there’s a smaller scene than in some of its larger neighbours there are plenty of options.

Games are available throughout the country, but Dublin has the biggest concentration. Most famous is Escape Boats, which has not only the novelty of a floating venue but also two excellent games. I also played and enjoyed Witch House at Clockwork Door (who are also a board games café); I also heard interesting things about FourFront Games on the south side of the city.

Ireland does well on similar-but-different attractions: Go Quest in Dublin presents teams with a series of challenge rooms, and Boda Borg has its only European branch outside Sweden in Lough Key, a couple of hours‘ drive outside Dublin. Both are closer to The Crystal Maze than a typical escape room experience.

Covering the 🇬🇧 United Kingdom properly is, strictly speaking, outside the scope of this article. But since I’m reducing equally rich and complex escape game scenes in other countries to a short summary, it’s only fair that I do the same for my home country.

There’s no shortage of blog/review sites, though for some reason the UK sites tend more to a personal blog style where most of those elsewhere in Europe lead with a game directory to which ratings are secondary – perhaps because Exit Games provides an excellent map and directory (also available as a list here) that thoroughly covers that need. Naturally, we also provide comprehensive listings, with a map of games and full games list.

For game reviews, The Logic Escapes Me has London covered along with large parts of south England, the northwest region, Edinburgh, NottinghamAberdeen, and plenty more, including several of the main continental escape destinations. Escape Review and London Escapists also have plenty of reviews for London and beyond. For a summary by overseas visitors, both Escape Room Tips (from San Francisco) and Two Bears Life (from Vienna) have write-ups of their visits to London. Or just browse the games on this site – the details page for each game has links through to the other UK bloggers‘ reviews of that game, as well as player reviews.

While London has more games than any other single UK city, the northwest England area encompassing Manchester, Liverpool and surrounding cities and towns is a thriving hotspot for both games and reviewers. For recommendations and reviews in the area, see Brit of an Escape HabitReally FunEscape Game Addicts, and The Great Escapees; and plenty of others (full list of UK escape room bloggers here).

Most visitors to the UK will likely focus on London, but there are some astonishingly good games elsewhere that are well worth travelling for, especially in Edinburgh, near Manchester, the Nottingham/Derby area, and in south England (Bournemouth, Crawley, Southampton, Salisbury, Winchester) – see the ‚best of‘ lists on this and the other UK review sites for specific recommendations.

On the not-exactly-an-escape-room front, The Crystal Maze exists in both London and Manchester, and has proven appeal even to enthusiasts from overseas who don’t have fond memories of the TV show that it recreates.

For Welsh game reviews, see Armchair Escapist (previously known as Geeks In Wales); Cardiff has the highest concentration of games by some way, but based on the games there I’ve played and heard about, it doesn’t yet have stand-out games to compare with those in London and Edinburgh.

Finally, Belfast has relatively few games but Escape Rooms Belfast is the local branch of the very well-reviewed Escape Hour in Edinburgh, and I noticed a vote of confidence for horror game The Preacher at Escape Belfast (which, confusingly, is not a branch of the Escape brand found in many other UK cities).
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Benelux

The 🇳🇱 Netherlands are positively packed with escape rooms. If you look at Escape Talk’s list of top 20 venues, only one is in Amsterdam, with the others scattered the length and breadth of the country – which is a healthy sign for the industry there, even if it’s frustrating for escape room tourists trying to pack in as many games as possible!

For all three Benelux countries, Escape Talk provides a comprehensive directory of games, with aggregate ratings for most of them based on publicly sourced reviews. Escape Rooms Nederland also provide a directory of Dutch games, as well as a top 10 list based on personal favourites and, separately, on crowd-sourced voting. All-Escape Rooms also have a top games list, though based on crowd-sourced ratings not their own reviews. And Escape Room Reviews is another directory site, with games scored by aggregate votes.

The UK’s The Logic Escapes Me also has a thorough guide of 18 games in 8 Amsterdam venues, plus a handful in Breda, with a strong vote of confidence for the high standard of the Dutch games. EscapeRoomers.de provide a ranking for 27 games across the country.

The majority of foreign visitors will be interested in games in or close to Amsterdam. As well as the Dutch sites above, see the Amsterdam guide at the UK’s The Logic Escapes Me and the article by US blogger Room Escape Artist. Both have high praise for Sherlocked; Recommendations I’ve heard elsewhere concur on Sherlocked (especially The Vault), and also Logic Locks; and My Escape Club is the highest ranked Amsterdam venue on Escape Talk’s list. Austrian blog Two Bears Life also gives their favourite games, concurring with those, in particular Sherlocked and Questomatica.

However, it’s very worth getting outside the capital if you can. Recent visitors have been raving about The Dome by Escape Room Nederland in Bunschoten – by all accounts this is one worth making strenuous efforts to get to. One more that’s right at the top of Escape Talk’s list and frequently mentioned by enthusiasts is Kamer 237 in Volkel; see Escape Talk and also the ranking list from EscapeRoomers.de to see many more recommendations. Frankly, I get the impression you could spend a couple of weeks travelling around the country playing games non-stop without being in any danger of running out of good ones to try.

There may not be quite so many escape rooms in 🇧🇪 Belgium, but you’re unlikely to run out of games to play there either. Escape Talk is a good source of game listings, but has fewer ratings for games in Belgium than in the Netherlands. However, both Escape Games Belgium and De Beste Escaperooms provide a thorough game directory with a similar system of crowd-sourcing reviews; and see also review blog Escape Belgium.

You can find enthusiast reviews of Brussels games at local blog Escape Reviews, UK-based site The Logic Escapes Me and French site Escape Games Paris, as well as our own reviews. Of the local games, newcomer Escape Rush is a must-play, despite being located further out than most of its competition. Nearer to the centre, Escape Prod is excellent and Enygma and Let Me Out also come recommended.

Ghent and Antwerp have a decent number of games too, as well as being very pleasant cities to visit; and in Ghent I recommend trying the highly unusual Locked. I’ve also noticed a specific recommendation for Escaping Belgium in Retie, and get the impression that there’s plenty more to discover.

🇱🇺 Luxembourg has quite a lot of catching up to do on its neighbours with only five venues so far, four in the city and one a short distance to the south in Dudelange. These are listed on Escape Talk but have no review scores as yet; but Escape Games Paris has reviews and scores for many of the games in the city.
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Iberian Peninsula

🇪🇸 Spain is served by several Spanish-language directory sites, but few give rankings and recommendations; where they do, it’s largely based on TripAdvisor ratings. However, there is also a plethora of blog sites providing reviews and recommendations, including in no particular order:

This is only a sample – ExtreEscapers have a much longer list of Spanish escape game blog sites, including an index of the ones that give game rankings.

Escape Radar appears to be a handy resource for finding games with availability for particular times/places; and Escape Room Lover provides a comprehensive map/directory, plus some rankings and a few reviews for games in Barcelona, Madrid and Galicia; plus there are a couple of Barcelona rooms reviewed at Escape Games Paris.

Barcelona is a huge centre for escape rooms, with dozens of venues. Of those, I notice some making frequent appearances at the top of ranking lists: Horror Box, Cubick, Maximum EscapeEnigmikJuego Enigma. Others I’ve seen recommended include Jurassic Land at Escape Barcelona and Open Mind Room Escape. An enthusiast/owner friend recommends both games at Bizarre Escape Rooms as well. For a much more systematic set of suggestions though, take a look through the list compiled by EscapeRoomers.de, which combines rankings from multiple experienced players for 32 of the best games in and around the city.

While you’re unlikely to run out of high-quality games to play in Barcelona, outside the city some games that appear well worth travelling for are Insomnia Corp in Berga and Can Bruna in Vilafranca de Penedès (90 mins and 50 mins respectively by car from Barcelona, in different directions, though the former is neatly on the route between Barcelona and Andorra…).

The next densest concentration of games is in Madrid, although the capital has far fewer games that top local enthusiasts‘ lists. Of those in the city, EXIT Madrid is a common recommendation, particularly the Cold War room – The Logic Escapes Me has a review of that and some other Madrid rooms. Five Mon-Keys might be worth checking out too; and see also Escape Room Lover’s Madrid rankings. Fox in a Box have a branch here too, with Bunker being the game most often mentioned of theirs; and a few other recommendations not covered by those are Hermético, Escapeway, Action HouseBrainBreak and Escape the Loggia. See also this article from Two Bears Life, which reviews their favourites of those they picked to play from informed recommendations.

Elsewhere in the country, I notice Way Out in Pamplona and Mad Mansion in Bilbao placing well in the Room Escapers ranking list. Lock Me If You Can has good things to say about Clue Hunter and X-Door in Valencia; SK Pistas agrees with the former but gives middling scores to the latter. And The Logic Escapes Me has a good set of game reviews for Málaga and surrounding area on the south coast.

There are plenty of other games throughout the country, including a healthy selection on the Canary Islands and the Balearics. I haven’t noticed particularly strong recommendations for any of those, but if you’re going to Majorca then Two Bears Life have a report on three of the venues there and Spain-based bloggers Die Helden have ranked a good selection of the rooms. There are lists of available games with aggregate TripAdvisor ratings for both groups of islands at Escape Room Lover (click through from the map to the appropriate region). There’s also one venue in Gibraltar (reviewed by The Logic Escapes Me), which strictly speaking I ought to list under the UK section above, but which like the Rock itself I’ll leave here stranded in the middle of the Spanish bit.

🇵🇹 Portugal has fewer review sites but has plenty of games in Lisbon and Porto, plus some in other larger cities such as Coimbra and Aveiro. I’ve played a few games in the country and in Lisbon I recommend the unusual, immersive Safarka; also, although I didn’t get a chance to try them I heard consistently good things about ScapersEscapeAdvisor recommends Escape Hunt: Introduction To A Secret Society – I didn’t much like the Earthquake game at the venue and Escape Hunt doesn’t have a great reputation elsewhere, but their review suggests that game might be the exception.

In Porto there’s solid quality to be found at Porto Exit Games. You can find reviews of some of the other venues in the city here, at Lock Me If You Can and Escapemadness. However, a enthusiast who visited recently recommends White Rabbit and Escape4Real over the places covered in those reviews.

Finally, tiny 🇦🇩 Andorra punches above its weight with four venues. Particularly notable is the local branch of Claustrophobia, whose Avalanche of Oblivion game gets not only a glowing endorsement from Escape Room Tourism but also a coveted Bragg from the Top Escape Rooms Project.
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Central Europe

As I expect most people reading this will already be aware, 🇭🇺 Hungary has a legendary status in escaping circles as the place that escape rooms first really exploded in Europe. Budapest had dozens of venues when most other European cities had a handful at most.

Exit Games provides a game directory for the country, and you may be able to find discounts through that site too. For recommendations, The Logic Escapes Me has a very comprehensive write-up of almost all the venues in the city. Plenty of other reviewers have also made the pilgrimage to the city, and you can find write-ups from Escape Review, Escape Room Tourism, The Uncontainables, Two Bears Life, Escape Roomer, Escape Games Paris, and Escape Talk (part 1 and part 2). Local blog Szabadulos has an English-language run-down of their recommendations too; also see Esc-Apes, which has ratings for a great many of the city’s games, though you may need an auto-translator to follow the details. EscapeRoomers.de have also compiled a list of recommended games based on rankings from multiple enthusiasts – you can find their list here.

There are a huge number of games, and not all of them are high quality. Games that I’ve seen multiple recommendations for include Heaven & Hell by E-Exit, Pirate Cave Escape Room, White Mission by Gozsdu Mission, Submarine by HintHunt, Legacy of Noo’zaca by Mindquest, Enigma Mission by Enigma, Napuche by LogIQrooms, and various games by Mystique. Also Rabbit Hole by Exit Point – which is no longer available, but their other game may be worth a look. Also recommended is Bunkergame, which has a game involving escaping „10 rooms in 100 minutes“.

There are games to be found in the rest of Hungary as well, but with such a wealth of choice in the capital, few visitors are likely to go looking for them.

🇦🇹 Austria is home to the Two Bears Life blog, and you can find some reviews for games in Vienna and Linz there; and also German-language blog Out Of Time, which has a good number of reviews and recommendations for Vienna and elsewhere. In addition, The Logic Escapes Me’s writeup covers 26 games at 9 venues in Vienna. Those three seem to broadly concur on which games should be top of your list, as does the game ranking list from EscapeRoomers.de.

Fewer venues exist in other parts of the country, but Out Of Time highlight some games in Linz and Innsbruck. We’ve played a couple of rooms in Salzburg, with both games also to be found in other locations in Austria, but neither was particularly stand-out.

I’ve noticed a recommendation for 2 hour horror game Slaughterhouse in Klagenfurt in south Austria, and there seems to be a correlation between larger games and quality – though it’s not clear whether it’s available in English.

🇨🇿 Czechia / Czech Republic has a huge range of games in Prague, including several of excellent quality. Solve Prague is an English-language local directory / map /review site with a top games list that also offers discounts for some games. UK review site The Logic Escapes Me has a guide based on reviews of 25 of them, most of which are also ranked by EscapeRoomers.de. In the unlikely event that’s not enough information for you, see also Escape Room Tourism’s articles on Questerland and The Chamber.

Brno has over a dozen different escape venues, so might be worth a look too; and Liberec and Ostrava both have branches of The Chamber, which is frequently described as Prague’s top escape venue.

While it’s less well known as a centre for escape games than Budapest and Prague, 🇵🇱 Poland has a thriving scene with over a hundred games in Warsaw and several hundred more around the country. These are comprehensively indexed by the directory site LockMe.pl, which also provides city-wide and country-wide rankings.

Based on the 16 games in Warsaw I played, the games there are of a high standard, with several stand-out games that don’t make my all-time top 5 list, but which comfortably make it into the top 10%. My experience of the LockMe.pl rankings was that they are a useful starting point but not definitive, with a couple of high-ranked games proving a disappointment, and a couple of average-ranked ones turning out to be excellent. As a directory the site is invaluable, though.

Kraków also has plenty, and both rooms at Combinator EXITGame get a strong recommendation; their Pirates‘ Ship game is also top-rated on LockMe.pl for the city. I’ve also heard good things about Gamescape’s Anatomy of Crime.

In addition to the obvious destinations of Warsaw and Kraków, the LockMe.pl rankings suggest it might be worth visiting Poznań and perhaps Wrocław. Their country-wide #1 spot is however contested by the company Wyjście Awaryjne in Bydgoszcz and a couple of games in or near Katowice (Tortuga by TickTack and Quest Cage’s Moriarty room).

🇸🇰 Slovakia lags behind its neighbours; there are a couple dozen venues in the country, mostly in Bratislava, but so far hasn’t been hit by the escaping craze to quite the same extent. I have no information on any of the games there other than TripAdvisor reviews, though a commenter below recommends Questum’s Secret of Nikola Tesla.

As far as I’m aware there are no escape games in 🇱🇮 Liechtenstein yet.
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Nordic countries

Scandinavia doesn’t have quite as developed an escape room market as its surrounding countries, with not much more than a dozen venues per country at most, and little in the way of blog and directory sites.

In 🇸🇪 Sweden, Stockholm has fewer venues than most West European capitals, though I’ve heard rumours that the game quality there is higher than the quantity would suggest. There’s a good write-up of nine of the city’s games at Escape.sg, and I’ve separately heard a recommendation for Escape Stories. And both Escape Room Tourism and Two Bear’s Life have played a few rooms while visiting, of which their favourites were, respectively, local Fox in a Box branch RoomEscape’s Zodiac Killer room; and Valhalla by Exit Games Stockholm.

The main other cities where you can find games are in the south: Gothenburg, Norrköping and Malmö. There are plenty scattered elsewhere though, as shown by this map of Swedish games.

Sweden does however have Boda Borg in seven locations across the country. That follows a different format that’s closer to an amusement park, and pre-dates escape rooms by well over a decade, but it has a lot of cross-over appeal for escape enthusiasts.

🇩🇰 Denmark has a cluster of venues in Copenhagen and a handful elsewhere. Local site Escaped.dk (Danish only) have a comprehensive map plus reviews for a good number of games. You’ll find additional Copenhagen reviews on Survivors‘ Lounge and a couple on this site too. I haven’t seen enthusiasts recommending the games in the city as really top-tier, but there is no shortage of games and plenty of solid ones.

The venue most often suggested is Mystery Makers, and I’ve also seen mentions for TimeQuest and Midgaard Event; the highest rated on Escaped.dk are Da Vinci at Midgaard Event, Seven at Brain Game CPH and The Laboratory at TimeQuest. Also, Malmö is an easy 45 minute hop away, so consider the venues there too.

Similarly, 🇳🇴 Norway’s games are primarily clustered in Oslo, and I have little information about any of them beyond what’s on TripAdvisor. The country does have what might possibly be the world’s most northerly escape room, in Arctic Escape in Tromsø.

The only part of Scandinavia in which I’ve played any escape games myself is 🇫🇮 Finland, and Exite in Helsinki was a solid, impressive venue; I’ve also seen some recommendations at third-hand for The Ghost of the Opera at Escape Room and President’s Apartment at Exit Room Helsinki.

There are games elsewhere around the country, particularly in Tampere, and if you’re in Helsinki bear in mind that Estonia’s capital Tallinn is also a short-ish ferry ride away.

For full game listings across the country see local site Escape Games Finland, which also has visitor-sourced game reviews.

Surprisingly (to me), 🇮🇸 Iceland has just the one solitary escape venue: Reykjavik Escape. I’ve played one game there and found it fairly unremarkable.
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Baltics

🇪🇪 Estonia has a rapidly expanding escape room scene in Tallinn. Having visited a couple of times I can provide a fairly comprehensive list of reviews, and there are a couple of unusual games that should be high on all enthusiasts‘ lists. In particular, if you’re anywhere in the region you should make it a priority to visit the remarkable Affect Laboratories, whose Interview is a crazily ambitious and unusual game packed with genre-breaking ideas. Also a must-visit is the local branch of Claustrophobia, who have the remarkably high-tech Gravity as well as two other high quality games.

Most of the other venues offer more typical games, though elsewhere, and Saw was not available in English at the time).

I’d also highlight Imaginaris: Shambala, which was badly flawed on our visit but had enough promise it might be worth a look anyhow; and Get Away Zone: Red Alert, which has some unexpected moments that the squeamish should avoid but others may enjoy, and who now also offer VR games.

Outside the capital, there are a few venues in Tartu and elsewhere.

For 🇱🇻 Latvia, Quest Revisor is a Latvian review site (but with an English-language version) with excellent coverage of the games in that country, plus a handful in Lithuania and a couple in the UK. Almost all the games listed are in Riga, but then there are only a handful in existence outside the capital. If you’re looking at their game list in ranking order, check the unrated games at the end of the list too – in particular, Escape Room: Arcade Games was an interestingly different experience that I enjoyed a lot.

We played fifteen of the Riga games in 2017, and of the venues we tried I’d recommend MyEscape and GetOut; our full review list is here. Our experience was that Riga has some very elaborate, ambitious and sophisticated games, which were all too often let down by technical glitches or (at some venues) poor game-mastering.

Escape Room Map and Unlockers are also Latvian directory sites with game scores/recommendations and useful maps of venue locations. The latter is Russian-language only, but is currently more comprehensive; their map covers all three Baltics countries and is a good way to find the few games outside the capitals.

Games in 🇱🇹 Lithuania are also clustered in the capital, Vilnius, with a couple dozen different venues. I have little information about any of them beyond Trip Advisor reviews, but Escape Roomer played a couple of rooms and recommend Wrong Room (though it looks like the rooms they’re describing may no longer exist). Kaunas might be worth a look too though – I’ve noted a recommendation for Bėglys there, and Unlockers reviewed a couple of rooms at Break Free with decent scores.
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South Europe

🇮🇹 Italy seems to be less well served than most of the west European countries for escape room blogs and directories, but there’s a Facebook enthusiasts group for Italy; and another Facebook page for EscapeRoomItalia gives general information and news in Italian. Breaking the usual rule that escape games cluster in the capital city, Italian games are most numerous and possibly also highest quality in Milan; though there are also plenty to play in Rome.

The escape games seem to mainly serve local players not the tourist trade, so don’t expect to find many games in some of the obvious tourist hotspots: Venice has only two venues at present (In Fuga and Intrappola.to), and Pisa has a similar number. In comparison, northern cities such as Turin and Bologna have plenty to choose from.

In the absence of local rating sites, Two Bears Life have a write-up of five companies in Rome, of which their favourite was Game Over (which is the same company we’ve reviewed in the UK); Escape Talk also have reviews for them and for Magic Escape RoomLock Me If You Can have a selection of reviews of games in Florence, Milan and Rome from a visit to Italy, of which their favourites look to be Fox in a Box in Florence, and Secret Rooms in Milan. Other rooms in Milan highlighted by enthusiasts include what used to be the local branch of Claustrophobia, now renamed to Questopia, and TRAP Milano (which I believe is a franchise of the well-known Hungarian company, though the rooms here are not duplicates of the ones in Budapest).

There are, unsurprisingly, no escape games to be found in 🇸🇲 San Marino or the 🇻🇦 Vatican, though there’s one in Rimini and of course lots in Rome.

🇬🇷 Greece’s scene is most focused on Athens, an outstanding city for escape rooms that has a wealth of highly advanced games to choose from. Many are longer than 60 minutes, many use live actors. A relatively high number are horror-themed, but plenty are not.

For me and for many other visiting enthusiasts, Paradox Project is the stand-out attraction. Their acclaimed first game is 180 minutes long; their stunning second game is 200 minutes long, and blows out of the water not only its predecessor but most other escape rooms you might compare it to. You should absolutely make sure you include this one on your schedule.

Other than that, there are so many warmly recommended games for the city you may find it hard to know which to pick. We’ve played and reviewed 14 games in the city, but that’s barely scratching the surface. An excellent starting point is the ranking list from EscapeRoomers.de, covering 43 games.

As well as Paradox Project, Cosmos 05 by Escapepolis is a particular stand-out, and I notice The Prison by Adventure Arena also placing high in the rankings list above. Escaped have a large number of very cinematic games; The Brainfall Hotel offer actor-led 90 minute games in gorgeous settings; Sherlocked Homes gets frequent recommendations especially for their pirate-themed Cursed Willy.

If you like your games scary, then Requiem by Mystery Lab has an impressive and ferocious reputation; and you might also consider The Darkwood Village or EscapeClue’s Lethal Decision. For something less intense, Lockhill is well-established and very well regarded.

When booking games in Greece, particularly with any ‚performance game‘ involving live actors, be aware that not all are English-friendly. If the company’s website has an English version you’re almost certainly fine; if their website is Greek only they may still support English, but check with the venue if in doubt.

For the country more generally, Escapology provides a directory of games in Greece with ratings and a top 20 list, which is dominated by games in Athens. The Escape also has a good directory with ratings, though the structure makes it a little harder to locate their top favourites, and you might find Room Escaper’s map of games in and around Athens useful.

You’ll find games in Crete, Rhodes, Thessaloniki and other popular tourist areas too, though I have fewer clues on which ones are worth trying beyond looking at the ratings on Escapology’s by-region lists.

🇨🇾 Cyprus has a dozen venues, half in Limassol and the rest in Nicosia, Paphos, and the Ayia Napa / Protaras resort area. Games mentioned as recommendations in Limassol include Escape Limassol and Perfect Crime by Puzzle 3041; and in Nicosia, Escape The Room. Greek directory site The Escape provides game listings, with ratings for a few.

🇲🇹 Malta has precisely two escape venues, one on each side of Valletta: Scavenger Escape in Sliema and Can You Escape? in Fgura. Scavenger Escape is the same company that I’ve played in Salzburg and has been reviewed by The Logic Escapes Me in Budapest. Can You Escape? is a local company, and there’s a write-up by Two Bears Life. Room Escapers also have a Spanish-language review for one game at Scavenger and one game at Can You Escape?.
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Balkans

The main locations to go for escape rooms here are Belgrade, Zagreb and Ljubljana, each of which has 10-20 venues and some apparently high quality rooms. There is a sprinkling of other venues around Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia, but games are heavily concentrated in the capital cities. What’s lacking is a good reliable review site for the region – there’s definitely a gap there that could be filled by a local enthusiast or two.

For Belgrade (🇷🇸 Serbia) games I’ve noticed more than one person recommending include Murder at the Masonic Lodge by PIN Escape RoomsEscapemania’s Robin Hood room, and a couple of the games at Adrenalin Escape Rooms; those three also hold the top slots on Trip Advisor. All those recommendations are from a little while back, but suggest that the games there compare favourably with Budapest in quality (though not quantity).

In 🇭🇷 Croatia, while the capital Zagreb is the main escaping centre, from personal experience I can recommend Dubrovnik Escape Room in Dubrovnik. In Zagreb, the local branch of Slovenian company Enigmarium comes recommended, as do the two games at Exit Games. International chain Fox in a Box has branches in several locations (Zagreb, Split, Dubrovnik, Rijeka), and of their games Bank Robbery seems to be the most often recommended. (We’ve reviewed their Prison and Bunker games in Munich.) There’s also a FaceBook enthusiasts group for the country, which is in Croatian but which might be helpful anyhow.

🇸🇮 Slovenia’s Enigmarium seems to have a rather dominant position in the country, with branches in Maribor and Laško as well as in the capital Ljubljana; they also run the game available at Ljubljana Castle and at one point offered a winter-only game in an igloo. Their name tends to come up in enthusiast recommendations, along with MindMaze and The Key.

With few reviewers having passed through the country I’m uncertain how well those games compare to those elsewhere in Europe. However, the scene seems vibrant enough to support some unusual variations on escape rooms. The Labyrinth game that used to run here has now closed down, but Forest Escape caught my eye for being a rare outdoor venue, with one of their games being played after dark in the forest (!). And Sensperience is operated by Enigmarium and provides a game that’s played while seated and blindfolded, with the gamemaster and actors guiding the team through the experience.

Escape rooms haven’t really reached the rest of the Balkans yet. I reviewed one game in Sarajevo (🇧🇦 Bosnia & Herzegovina); there is also a branch of Fox in a Box plus a company called Key Room Escape. Skopje in 🇲🇰 Macedonia now has five games across four companies listed on TripAdvisor; 🇲🇪 Montenegro has a couple along the coast in Herceg Novi and  Budva🇦🇱 Albania has one in Tirana; and that’s about it. A number of companies have launched but then closed in these regions, so it appears the industry is struggling to get started for some reason.
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East Europe

Heading east, 🇷🇺 Russia is in a completely different league to the rest of Europe. A mind-boggling number of games exist, above all in Moscow and St. Petersburg but also throughout the rest of the country. The industry is more established than in the rest of Europe, meaning many high quality games and plenty that push the genre boundaries by introducing live actors, physical challenges in addition or instead of mental ones, and even a game that is played blindfold.

Beware, not all games can be played in English! Watch out especially for anything described as a ‚performance‘ rather than a ‚quest‘, or anything that mentions live actors, and if in doubt check with the venue before booking.

If you’re considering playing games in Moscow, this document will give you much better information than I can provide here. It’s a write-up of a visit by a certain team of four enthusiasts who not only played a crazy number of games there, but also set the Guinness world record for most escape rooms played in 24 hours (more info on that here!).

For local resources, the Russian enthusiast websites are also not the easiest to navigate even with auto-translate, and a lot of information is in groups and pages on the Russian social media site VKontakte. However, Mir Kvestov provides a directory with both enthusiast and crowd-sourced ratings for Moscow, and plenty of information for games in other cities too. If you want to try other review sites then the list at TipicalOrg is a good starting point for finding them, such as:

Some of these also cover some of Belarus and Ukraine, though relatively sparsely and with few ratings. Almost all the ratings appear to be crowd-sourced, and therefore it’s not clear how reliable these are. Individual room recommendations often start with the Claustrophobia franchise (e.g. in St. Petersburg, rooms such as The Fear, Houdini Escape and The Haunting). City Quest and iLocked are also successful franchise operations that are unlikely to let you down, with the latter being primarily based in St. Petersburg; one group of visiting enthusiasts were particularly keen on iLocked’s Dinosaurs and Star Warriors games.

For Moscow, in addition to the document linked above, you may also get ideas from this list of suggestions for mostly non-traditional escape experiences, by a Russian game designer. (The second half of the list is in the comments below, in English as well as Russian.)

For 🇧🇾 BelarusExtra Reality provides a top 100 games list, as well as a directory of games (note that this includes not just normal escape games but also VR games, city hunt games, ‚RPG quests‘ (which I presume are LARP events), Mafia clubs, etc.; the ‚labyrinth‘ category looks interesting. Two thirds of the escape venues are concentrated in Minsk, with the remainder scattered around the country.

🇺🇦 Ukraine has a strong escape scene in Kiev and Odessa, plus more in Lviv, Kharkiv, etc. One company, Vzaperti (a.k.a. Lockdown or Lock Up, depending on the translation software you use), has over 30 rooms in Kiev alone. Q-room now looks defunct, but it used to provide ratings for some of the rooms in Kiev and Odessa, and their Kiev top picks were dominated by Vzaperti and Claustrophobia, plus a couple of others such as KADroom and Maze Quest. Odessa recommendations are more varied, though Mousetrap, and  Выход (Exit) all look like good starting points.

I can only find one escape room venue in 🇲🇩 Moldova that’s definitely still running (Room Break) – there appear to have been another three, all also in the capital Chișinău, but all look to now be defunct.

🇷🇴 Romania’s escape rooms are heavily concentrated in Bucharest, with over fifty venues in the city. Escape Central provides an English-language list of their favourite Bucharest games, and Escape Advisor has a good list of games with reviews and ratings.

With guidance from those sites we visited and reviewed seventeen games – reviews here. We were mostly playing the top recommended games in the city, but even so the quality was very impressive. In no particular order the games I would recommend mostly strongly are:

  • The Last Adventure of Indiana Jones at Escape Arena (a great adventure that’s also intellectually challenging)
  • Lord of the Rings at 60 Minutes (beautiful, many skill-based puzzles)
  • Prohibition at The Codex (make sure you go on a Tuesday or Thursday to get the performance version)
  • Both games at Inside Rooms (Harry Potter for a magical romp, Cabin in the Woods for occult investigations)
  • Coven at The Void (a clever horror game which builds atmosphere without need of jump scares)
  • Chernobyl Reactor 4 at Locked Up (very cinematic, and some of their other games look promising too)

The length of that list reflects the breath and depth of quality available in the city; I recommend also checking the local review sites for any new games opened since our visit. Several of them are longer than the standard 60 minutes. (You may also see enthusiast recommendations for Escapology and Roomania, but those two venues are now closed.)

You’ll also find a selection of games in other cities such as Cluj-Napoca, Constanta, Brasov, Timisoara, etc. The second-hand reports I’ve heard from enthusiasts and Bucharest owners suggest that those are mostly not up to the high standard of the Bucharest scene; though in Brasov Puzzle Punks has an excellent reputation, and Obscuria might be another one to check out.

Most of 🇧🇬 Bulgaria’s escape rooms are similarly clustered in the capital, Sofia. The main place to look for game recommendations is http://www.vsichkistai.bg/ – it’s in Bulgarian, but the first top menu button gives links to game lists for Sofia, Varna, Plovdiv and Burgas. The ratings there are crowd-sourced, but you can find longer-form game reviews at Fury Escape (also in Bulgarian).

I played four games on a brief visit to the city in spring 2018 – reviews here. Teorema Rooms‘ Atlantis is a gorgeous game with an emphasis on physical and skill puzzles, and I’d place it amongst the very best in Europe. I also particularly enjoyed BlueLab from Endorphin Games. Sofia is positioning itself as a European centre for escaping, and there were clearly plenty more high quality games; others I’ve seen enthusiasts recommending include Escapeway’s The Crystal Skull, Dextrophobia (beware that their three rooms are in different locations!), 3Key Rooms, Myst Entertainment and Offline, and others.

More reviews from visiting enthusiasts: The Uncontainables (video reviews in English) and Escape Roomers (video reviews in Italian).

So confident is the city in the quality of its escape rooms that there’s an ‚escape room championship‚ aimed at teams from other countries who want to tour the city and compete for the best escape times. If you just want to play games it’s far cheaper to make your own arrangements, but if nothing else its game list seems to be a good check-list of the city’s best games.

While Sofia is very much the place to go, the Black Sea resort of Varna has the next highest concentration of games, and of those, Escape Room comes with a recommendation from a local enthusiast as well as high marks on http://www.vsichkistai.bg/.

Finally, 🇹🇷 Turkey has a good reputation for its games, which are primarily clustered in Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara but can also be found in a couple dozen other locations across the country. Despite the high numbers of games, the industry may be in decline – one of the original leading Turkish bloggers describes the escape room scene as having died, with large numbers of companies shutting down. Even so, Trip Advisor lists over fifty venues in Istanbul alone, so you won’t have difficulty finding games to play. Horror themed games are particularly common, though the quantity of games means there are plenty of alternatives if that’s not to your taste.

For finding those games, Yeni Görev provides a venue map as well as a directory. Kaçış Merkezi also provides game lists; the language on the site seems focused on horror games, but they include non-horror games too.

None of those give ratings or recommendations, but Gerçek Kaçış Oyunları has a country-wide top games list which could provide some guidance, though note that the ratings are crowd-sourced so should probably be treated with caution.

Additionally, Escape Room Tourism’s top games list from Feb 2016 includes several Istanbul games, including four out of the top five (!); their Istanbul report compares the games there very favourably to those elsewhere in Europe. Austrian blog Two Bears Life visited Ankara in 2016, but the game they were impressed by has since closed down.
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Caucasus

You’ll find a few escape companies in the capital cities, with five venues in each of Tbilisi (🇬🇪 Georgia), Baku (🇦🇿 Azerbaijan), and Yerevan (🇦🇲 Armenia), including a branch of Claustrophobia in Baku. I haven’t heard reports back on the games there from any enthusiasts or bloggers, so TripAdvisor is your best source of information here.

As far as I can tell, no games exist outside the capitals.
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29 thoughts on “Guide to escape rooms in Europe

    1. escapethereview Post author

      Thank you! I’m certainly going to try, though it’ll take me a couple of days to incorporate just the feedback I’ve received just in the last 24 hours!

      Reply
  1. Pim Arts

    Great list, certainly will be useful on our next trips 🙂 And good to see you used us (escapetalk.nl) as a source! We included a link to this article in our Escape Weekly and posted about it on Facebook.

    Reply
    1. escapethereview Post author

      Thanks, if you know of any Danish review or directory sites that I’ve missed I’d be very interested to hear about them!

      Reply
  2. Escape Advisor

    Hey. Really cool and useful article. 🙂 Would you mind adding us to the list, please?
    The website is escapeadvisor.ro and it lists escape rooms in Romania (and their reviews from us and our users) and we’re soon launching the .com version of it for Europe.
    Thank you!

    Reply
    1. escapethereview Post author

      Added, thanks! Looks good.

      I notice the site’s language declaration is en-US (in the top-level tag) – I believe if you change that to Romanian then people viewing it from other countries will be able to auto-translate the content via their browser, which will make it easier to navigate.

      I’ll be interested in seeing the .com version, though I’ve avoided including any Europe-wide or global directories in this article unless they include a sufficiently high proportion of the escape games that exist – and so far, basically none of them do!

      Reply
  3. Mary

    Oh! I’m from Odessa UA, we were in x-escape.com and it’s the biggest part of rooms and in few others! I’m lovin it!

    Reply
  4. Mary

    Amazing list, keep it up. I usually travel europe and this is very helpful. I’m from Greece, there are tons of rooms in Athens. If you visit do not dare not visit a Greek Escape Room, they have risen to an awesome level. Just to help the most popular guide here is „TheEscape.gr“, the others you mention are not so popular between locals.
    Keep it up!!

    Reply
    1. escapethereview Post author

      Thanks for the tip! I’ve noticed what a thriving escape scene Greece has, and Athens is very high on my list of places to visit. Maybe later this year if I get a chance!

      Reply
  5. The Uncontainables

    Thanks for this comprehensive write up! We’ve just returned from a week of escapes in Budapest (we played 32 rooms!) …and we’re already searching for our next adventure. Very helpful/informative. Thank you! 🙂

    Reply
    1. escapethereview Post author

      Glad you found it useful! Of the 32 you played in Budapest, were there any particular highlights & recommendations (or anti-recommendations) that you’d add to the Hungary section above?

      Reply
    1. escapethereview Post author

      Absolutely, it’s top of my todo list along with thirty two other urgent things. 😉

      Reply
  6. Laura

    Hey! Really cool article. Would you mind adding us to the list, please?
    The website is escaperoomer.es and it lists escape rooms in Spain
    Thank you! 🙂

    Reply
    1. escapethereview Post author

      Hey Laura, I’m very happy to add any useful escape room directories and review sites to the article. It looks like you’re at a fairly early stage though – I can only see ten Madrid rooms listed and none for the rest of Spain? Let me know when you have more complete coverage and I’ll add a link.

      Reply
  7. Adam

    Fantastic article,

    I’m visiting Dubai in June and would be really keen to find some recommendations if anyone has played any rooms there?

    I’m struggling with the usual places, Top escape room project doesn’t really cover the middle east and other sources are limited,

    Has anyone played in the middle east?

    Reply
    1. escapethereview Post author

      Hey Adam, I haven’t heard any particular recommendations for Dubai and I don’t know of any review sites that cover that part of the world I’m afraid!

      The main ERE Facebook group has a few suggestions, if you join that and use the search function to find any mentions of Dubai – for example, I see someone recommending Phobia, which from the art style looks like it may be another Claustrophobia franchise gone independent (and so likely quite good).

      Hint Hunt, Escape Reality, Escape Hunt are all big chains as you’re probably aware, and you’ll find reviews of some of their UK games on this site.

      I’d be interested to hear what you think of any games you play there!

      Reply
  8. Viktor

    Hi from Slovakia,
    Thanks for your recommendation, we did Project Delta and it was awesome experience.
    I am huge enthusiast and for me this was a chance to experience similar type of game that i have made and as designer can’t experience it myself.
    I didn’t played the best ones in Budapest and Prague yet, but I think we have also awesome rooms here in Slovakia.

    Here is some list of best rooms in Slovakia in no particular order:
    To be honest I am gamedesigner of Wonderland in Košice, but many players say it was the best (we have 11 different themes so far, also in outstanding immersive quality, but Wonderland is bit unique).
    http://www.therooms.eu/en/wonderland

    We’ve played Nicola Tesla in Bratislava. Full of unique different set of puzzles. Honestly (in my opinion) not the best we have played, but it’s worth it.
    https://questum.sk/en/rooms/secret-nicola-tesla

    We didn’t played yet Nautilus in Žilina, but many players likes it as one of the best in Slovakia. Will try it this summer and will find out if it’s available also in english. (based on conversations with thousand of players that I had chance to chat, since we opened in December)
    https://www.escapefrom.sk/nautilus.html

    Also same story with EscapePlan in Námestovo. I am really looking forward to try it. All of the rooms are good, but didn’t play yet, just what other players often says.
    https://www.escapeplan.sk/

    We loved one really unique and awesome room in Czech Republic in Brno, the name is Steampunk and we have finally seen some original creative ideas.
    http://eng.steampunkbrno.cz/

    Did some more but they are recently closed so I will not list them here 🙁
    Hope this will help some enthusiast traveling through europe 🙂

    PS: we had some recommendations to try Sanatorium in Alicante (just a fun fact)

    Reply
    1. escapethereview Post author

      Thank you for the detailed recommendations! I’ve heard very little about the games in Slovakia, so that’s doubly useful. 🙂

      Reply
  9. Bart Eduard

    I am an enthusiast of escape rooms and I was just planing to take a tour with my friends trough the whole Europe just for this games. You were very helpful !

    Reply

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