Sarah Lolley
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The Great Escape

12/25/2017

3 Comments

 
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As kids, we were taught that the best Christmas gifts are made rather than bought, and although my lack of artistic ability should have put pain to that lesson long ago, I’ve never been able to shake it.

​In past years, I’ve given homemade vanilla extract and ten-packs of soup and certificates for babysitting services. More recently, I’ve made
personalized cryptic crosswords. (You can get my 2017 Christmas Cryptic here.)

But this year, fascinated by the concept, I decided to try my hand at something considerably more involved: a personalized escape room.
An “escape room” game (also called a “locked room” challenge), is a game in which you are literally locked into a room and have to figure out an elaborate set of clues and riddles in order to eventually find the key and escape within the time limit. Some of them are set in fabulous locations, like Toronto’s legendary Casa Loma.  Others involve famous fictional characters like William Murdoch, the Toronto detective of the CBC’s Murdoch Mystery series. Mine would be more modest: a game for six adults, to be played at my parents’ country home on Christmas Eve after the kids were safely asleep.
 
I set to work brainstorming ideas for a 60-minute game for six. And that’s when I hit a series of obstacles.
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The Location
My parents’ house has an open concept layout, which is lovely but doesn’t lend itself to confinement. The only rooms with doors, apart from the bathrooms, are the bedrooms, which were full of sleeping children, and my father’s dusty (but very orderly) tool room. This mean that I had to design something in which escape wasn’t the goal.
 
The Story
It’s Christmas, so I didn’t want anything too macabre. I didn’t want the group to be locked in jail or to have to solve a murder. I needed something compelling but also something fun and light to match the festive holiday mood. If escape rooms are typically “noir” mysteries, I needed a cozy mystery.
 
My Inexperience
I’ve never planned one of these before and there are a lot of moving parts. How could I be sure to pull it off?

I took all of this into account, gave it an inordinate amount of thought, and came up with a 60-minute home-based cozy escape room mystery for six adults, which we played on Christmas Eve.
 
Solution #1: Finding vs. Escaping
Instead of having the goal be escape, I designed a mystery in which the group had to find something. What was the prize? Well…
 
Solution #2: A Christmas-Themed Goal
Because it’s Christmas, I picked the coziest, most quintessentially Christmasy thing I could think of--a figgy pudding—and made that the goal. 
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The pudding itself was real, sourced from Gryphon d’Or bakery in Montreal, but I made up a fictional character named Great Aunt Mathilda Edwards (note the acrostic) to be its maker and I invented a reason for her having hidden it: she had unexpectedly been called away at the last minute. Rather than leave the figgy pudding in the cupboard where any harebrained intruder could swipe it, Great Aunt Mathilda hid it at the end of a series of clues for us to find.

The clues were most Christmas-themed and all were cozy. For example, starting in the foyer, the group had to figure out that the animals on various Christmas cards posted around the mirror (addressed to Great Aunt Mathilda, of course) corresponded to stuffed animals scattered around, each of which was tagged with a different number. The right animals in the right order gave the numbers to a combination padlock, which permitted the group to head upstairs.

Upstairs, there was a gift-wrapped box locked with three different padlocks:
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There were clues hidden inside Christmas ornaments. There were codes conveyed through garlands:
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Messages written on the back of puzzles that needed to be assembled…
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… and messages written in invisible ink:
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The group had to correctly determine which of three framed beauty shots to open in order to find a key, having been warned, via signs on the back, that opening the wrong one cost them five minutes: 
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My favourite clue was the GPS coordinates I hid at the bottom of glasses full of Christmas cocktails, which were inside a locked fridge. When the players drained their glasses, they were faced with a series of numbers. Placed in the correct order, they provided GPS coordinates for Cayenne, which led the group to a key taped to the back of a jar of Cayenne pepper.

The final reveal was the three-digit code for a locked briefcase, inside which was the figgy pudding. How did they find the code? By breathing on a mirror and watching the numbers appear.
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​In the escape room, as with cryptic crosswords, it was enormous satisfying to see people’s faces light up as they had an “ah-HA!” moment.

Solution #3: Lists, More Lists, And A Dry Run With Some Friends
How could I make sure I didn’t make any mistakes in setting up this complex game? In addition to making very detailed equipment and set-up checklists, I had five accommodating friends over for a dry run of the event ten days ago at my place in Montreal.
 
Not only was it a thrill to watch them figure out all the riddles I had set, it was invaluable to gauge the difficulty level, see which components of the game took longer than expected, and observe where there were inadvertent red herrings.
 
And in the end, my family did solve the great Figgy Pudding Escape Room challenge.
With 90 seconds to spare.
3 Comments
liz seybold
12/29/2017 04:22:57 pm

Fantastic - not only are you amazing to set it up but also your family for solving it - although I am not surprised by either!
Happy New Year

Reply
Another Sarah
1/1/2018 09:35:27 am

How A Perfect Plan Yields Neat Experiences With Your Expertise And Resolve. P.S. Acrostics are much harder to write than I thought!

Reply
Molly Sorensen
1/21/2018 02:35:23 pm

I am in your mother's bookclub and she told us about the Christmas Escape Room.
I love the concept and the way you adapted it to Brenda's open concept home. Clearly cleverness and humour run in the family! Thanks for sharing this. ☺

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    About Sarah

    I'm a writer, adventurer, amateur setter of cryptic crosswords, lover of "ah-ha!" moments, and exhausted mom.

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