Labyrinth Escape Room Japanese Horror




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Labyrinth Escape Rooms, Parramatta: Hours, Address, Labyrinth Escape Rooms Reviews: 5/5. All reviews insane asylum game master great fun horror room a lot of fun seconds to spare great room amazing experience group of friends first timers team bonding solve puzzles highly recommend this room cant wait well thought out fun experience great. Japanese Horror. Rated 5.00 out of 5 based on 1 customer rating (1 customer review) The Japanese Horror Room has closed. Take a look at our other great rooms available below. Reviews (1) 1 review for Japanese Horror. Rated 5 out of 5. Matthew Brizzi (verified owner).

Labyrinth Escape Rooms, Parramatta: Hours, Address, Labyrinth Escape Rooms Reviews: 5/5. All reviews insane asylum game master great fun horror room a lot of fun seconds to spare great room amazing experience first timers group of friends team bonding solve puzzles highly recommend this room cant wait well thought out great host cartel. Japanese developer Amata K.K. Has announced the launch will take place in November whilst confirming an Oculus Quest version will also be released. Last Labyrinth – Oculus Quest Screenshot First.

My group of friends (4 adults)checked out Labyrinth Escape Rooms’ Japanese Horror room in April 2018. We hadn’t been to Labyrinth since September 2015, soon after they opened,when we tried their Insane Asylum room (you can read my review of that roomhere).
The summary of Japanese Horror isbelow (taken from their website):
Manymoons ago, it is rumoured that four Japanese Kogalgirls were kidnapped and murdered in thehome of a depraved and sinister ghost. Decades later and the girl’s bodiesremain, overcome by the evil spirit who captured them and tormenting all whoenter.
Asdarkness takes over, it’s up to your team to brave the house of horrors.Outsmart the wicked and release the girl’s bodies from evil before you too aretrapped inside. The Kogalare waiting, will you deliver them to peaceful slumber?
Labyrinth has now been open formore than two and a half years. Theypreviously had a Mad Scientist room, which we didn’t manage to check out beforethey replaced the room. They currentlyhave three rooms open – Insane Asylum, Japanese Horror and Mexican Cartel.
Japanese Horror was our 92ndroom in Australia and our 62nd room in Sydney.
First off, I'll say what Ienjoyed most about Japanese Horror at Labyrinth Escape Rooms:
a)we had a lot of fun in Japanese Horror;
b)the room design is well-considered. They have managed to fit a lot of puzzlesinto a relatively small space;
c)the theming is strong – the props all look good in the space andlighting/audio all help to set the scene. I would describe Japanese Horror as spooky or eerie, rather than incrediblyscary. For those who are worried aboutrooms being too scary for them, I can report that there are no jump scares inthis room. By contrast, I have been to sometruly scary rooms (one in particular in Melbourne comes to mind) – I can reportthat Japanese Horror will not make you need a change of underwear. However, it is definitely not suited to youngkids;
d)I think Labyrinth are very clever at including a great mix of hightech and low tech puzzles. Some arefiendishly simple – the type that make you want to give yourself a foreheadslap when you figure out the solution. Othersrequire more than one step. Some of the puzzles in Japanese Horror (and in allof the Labyrinth rooms) have elements that remind me of more traditionalHungarian escape room style puzzles – these are typically lower tech puzzlesthat are quite manual and visual. Theywere a lot of fun and there were a couple of elements that we had not seen usedin escape rooms before, which was cool; and
Labyrinth escape games
e)Labyrinth use the voice of God system for communications betweenplayers and the game master. We didn’t askfor any hints during our game play, but the voice of God system is the bestform of communications in escape rooms in my view (except perhaps for those fewrooms where the game master is an actor inside the room with you, but these arecurrently very rare).
Labyrinth Escape Room Japanese Horror
As for some of the improvementsthat could be made to Japanese Horror, there isn’t much to report here. There was some automated audio that we couldn’tquite understand at one point (it was a little muffled) but it didn’t affectour game in any way (we guessed what was being said and we were right).
We managed to escape in around 37mins 20 secs, which meant that we broke the then current record by about 11minutes. I understand from Labyrinththat this is their hardest room with a very low escape rate and I can see thatit is a harder room than most escape rooms in Australia. I especially enjoyed reading all of thecomments on a Facebook from Labyrinth about our beating the record – so manyplayers who hadn’t been able to escape didn’t believe our time (or said that itmust have been our second attempt). Eventhough the time was good, I didn’t feel like we rushed our way through. Weenjoyed the puzzles and plodded along. Iexpect that the record will be broken again in the future – I can absolutelysee a team rushing through and escaping in around 30 minutes.
Japanese Horror is a greatroom. I am often asked for roomrecommendations and Japanese Horror ticks many of the boxes that most peopleare looking for – dark/eerie theme, great puzzles, good storyline andchallenging puzzles. Go and check it outand see if you can beat our record!
Where: Suite3/85-93 Victoria Road, Parramatta

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Duration: 60 minutes

Cost:
$38pp (or $152 for a team of 4)
Overall Rating: An eerie room with great puzzles

Labyrinth Escape Room Japanese Horror Movie

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More details: http://labyrinthescaperooms.com.au/

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