WeaknessesSometimes rooms are hot; people mentioned no air conditioning. Occasional confusion about the extra fee for the actor, and rare cases where scares are weak or mixed with administering. One review reported unsafe contact with equipment and a weak response to the incident.
StrengthsDetailed sets and light‑sound create a film‑like effect; the atmosphere hooks from the first minutes. Varied tasks without filler, lots of nice electronics. Staff are friendly and help right on time.
SecurityRules are explained before the start; the actor doesn’t touch. Against an overall safe experience there was a single review about an electric shock and no first aid, plus complaints about stuffiness — it’s wise to clarify conditions in advance.
Level of fearWithout an actor it’s moderately scary and suitable for families with kids 8–9 years old with supervision. With an actor the tension rises noticeably, but there is no physical contact.
Actors' gameActors are mostly praised: they keep distance, build tension, and appear deftly. Downsides — sometimes the actor combines hints with scares, or scares weaker than expected.
Quality of riddlesPuzzles are fair and varied: logic, attentiveness, interaction with objects and electric mechanisms. Difficulty ranges from medium to above medium; hints are appropriate and help when you stall. Some tasks feel non‑obvious, but there’s almost no extra props — everything is in play.
PlotYou try to hide from Jason at Crystal Lake and make your way through a locked house where someone is clearly there. The story leads through locations and keeps you tense without extra details.
Difficulty levelOptimal for groups of 3–5: newcomers may need hints, experienced players will have things to do. Overall medium difficulty, sometimes above medium.
Reviews