...it seems this blog is turning
into me writing about my puzzling gatherings again... and this one will be
another of those...
A couple of weeks ago Nick was in
town for the Red Bull Escape Room World Champs, and he had some time free the day
after it all wrapped up, so he invited a couple of us to partake in a little
recreational (i.e. non-championship!) escaping. He’d booked a session at the
Crystal Maze Experience in London and a gang of us duly met up at the appointed
hour via coffees at Mickey Dee’s and my attempts at walking right past the
place - Nick spared my embarrassment by yelling at me as I walked on by...
...a trinket, not THE Trinket |
Our suitably camp Mazemaster
arrived and introduced himself as Trinket (or Barry for the TripAdvisor review
if you didn’t like him! - He looked like a Trinket though...) and started by getting everyone in a suitably silly
mood with some wonderfully dubious banter as he got to know us a little. Once
that was done, we were whisked (jogging!) into the bowels of the maze, winding
our way from Olde England, sliding into the Aztec zone (with real sand on the
ground), floating through the future in space (the sight of Ali riding a dodgy-looking thrusting pink “rocket ship” will remain with me for a very long time),
the industrial zone, and finally getting our minute’s glory in the dome trying
to catch bits of gold foil... much silliness and a whole heap of fun - even if
we didn’t even come close to troubling the leaderboard at all!
From there we hopped on the tube
to Shepherds Bush (insert own joke here) for a quick bite to eat before
attacking “Sherlock, The Game is Now!”. By then we had accumulated sufficient
folks for two teams and we separated into a serious team and a slightly less
serious team... no prizes for guessing that I wasn’t on the former! Our team
was made up of Nick, Anne, Ali, Steve and I - and after most of us had done the
Time Run escapes created by the same team, we were really looking forward to
this one... and the initial impressions certainly didn’t disappoint!
We started
in what appeared to be a perfectly normal shop front for a service business -
the attention to detail had been superb, with signage, posters and marketing
material all themed with a wicked sense of humour for anyone looking at the
little details... an anteroom literally looked like it could have been lifted
straight out of the TV-series set and then we lurched into the game itself, where the
rooms (5 parallel sets of them!) were incredibly well-dressed, and each (for
there were several) had plenty of seriously whizz-bang technology- it was clear
that no expense had been spared - it was definitely on a par with the Time Run
production values. If I could have one grumble, it would be that a couple of
times you find yourself up against a task to get a bunch of things all answered,
before you can progress, and you only get a clue as to whether you’ve passed or
failed when you enter the final answer - and then you’re greeted with a pure
binary response... no clues as to which element might be wrong... and that got a
little frustrating, especially when one of them seemed to be giving encouraging
feedback all the way through only for us to be told we were wrong.
Unfortunately we didn’t manage to escape, but had managed to have a crack at
all of the puzzles at least. In the wonderfully themed pub afterwards we had
our free drinks and caught up with the other crew who’d literally smashed it. Talking to them about one of the final puzzles that had stumped me, I wasn’t
embarrassed given the solution required, and well-impressed that they’d managed
to bash through it so quickly... these guys really are good!
Most of the visitors then headed
off for yet more escape rooms - in fact some of them literally toured the UK
over the next week visiting some escape rooms that had been recommended on a
particular forum...
Later that week, after many,many
more escapes, Nick and Anne dropped by to visit for a couple of days so we took
them off to Stratford-upon-Avon for a wander through the old historic town with its many
rather wonky buildings, a Shakespeare-themed escape room, a visit to the MAD
Museum, dinner at E. Moon’s and then an interesting gender-bending production
of The Taming of the Shrew at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre.
Next day saw a walk in the woods
with the hounds and breakfast in the village before some gentle puzzling at
home, Nick got to play with a few puzzles he hadn’t managed to spend quite
enough time on at home and ended up solving them all... we got caught up on the
book and what still needed doing and managed to pull a few of the final
remaining pages together.
Bright and early next morning we
fed the tourists before heading down the motorway to Devon and the bustling
metropolis of Luppitt. We made pretty good time in spite of the holiday traffic
and found a bunch of puzzlers already making merry in the Puzzle Museum.
Steve and Ali shoved something
heavy in my hand and refused to accept anything in return. (On a totally
unrelated note, you WILL want to get a copy of the new Brass Monkey 3!) I
collected a package of little Japanese puzzling goodness freshly off an aircraft...
a bunch of new puzzles already in hand and I’d literally only been there a few
minutes.
Through in the inner sanctum
there were quick introductions and Nick seemed vaguely impressed with the
set-up... truth be told, I didn’t see his initial reaction, but if he wasn’t
impressed, I’ll eat my Panama!
Chinny’d asked James for some
pics of the internals of a family of puzzles he’s currently researching... James
had already sent him the pictures but decided he should leave the reassembly to
us... so we were greeted by a large pile of pieces all helpfully mixed
together... in fairness there was a pretty solid clue as to which bits went
together, in the woods they were made of. Ali steamed through a bunch of them, I
managed to contribute a pair of them and so did Big-Steve... when they were
done, Chinny had asked us to attack another family and we duly dived in...
...although it later transpired that I don’t know my Triacontahedrons from my
Dodechedrons (or frankly my R’s from my elbow!) and Ali and I ended up disassembling
and photographing 4 things already rather well-known to the Chin-meister... we
had some fun, but it wasn’t any use at all to Chinny - it just terrified the heck out of Ali, Big-Steve and I - so not a total loss then!
James and Lindsey provided a
fantastic spread for lunch yet again, although it always seems difficult to
attract puzzlers away from the puzzles just long enough to actually take some
fuel onboard.
Big-Steve and I spent a while in
the afternoon photographing a set of Jean Bihourd jigsaws for Jim - we
definitely got the right puzzles this time and Jim was suitably chuffed when I
sent the files through to him the next day - at least one of my missions for
the day had been successful!
Ethel and Simon had each brought
along a crate of goodies for the assembled masses to rake through and I managed
to find a couple of little things I’d been looking for in Ethel’s
crate, so I swapped them for a little pile of paper.
One of James’ visitors had
brought along a puzzle stool (please don’t insert your favourite joke here!)
he’d made when he was but a youth... and twenty years later it managed to keep
several stout puzzlers at bay for more than an hour - they got it in the end
and then enjoyed discussing the elegance of the mechanism with its creator.
During the course of the day I
discovered a new set of folding puzzles from Kohfuh which I’m looking forward
to having a serious crack at when I get a chance to do some gentle puzzling myself...
The English weather threw us a
serious curve-ball that weekend - catching all of us out by being wonderfully
sunny, in spite of the fact that it was a Bank Holiday weekend! So good it was,
that we spent quite a while out in the garden launching pneumatic rockets
skywards, and then spending a little while in between shots trying to find the
errant little rockets among the trees and shrubs at the edge of the garden -
serious pop-whizzzzzzz stuff!
During the course of the
afternoon Rich decided he wanted a go at Richelieu... except that en route to
Richelieu he spotted Goliath, so Goliath duly got stripped down into many
pieces which he then thoroughly mixed up (without the need for any of us to
encourage him or do some of it for him!).
During the course of the afternoon
Goliath went together bit by bit, with Rich occasionally looking at a piece in
his hand, realising he needed to backtrack a bit and duly tearing it all down
again... my series of pics of the progress were a bit confusing given the not-altogether-linear-nature of his progress... when I left he was pretty close,
and Michael duly sent me evidence that Rich had indeed triumphed over Goliath
shortly after I’d left for home.
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