Escape Room The Apartment Game Walkthrough
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(Room Escape) Apartment Escape 2 is a room escape game developed by DozenGames. You find yourself trapped in the apartment again, try to figure out how to escape. Escape Room: Apartment 10 Level 1-16 Walkthrough, Solutions, Cheats, Answers for iPhone, iPad, Android, Kindle, iPod Touch and other devices by Weiwei Huang.
- Escape Room:Apartment 12 Walkthrough (Doors and Floors games). Need help solving a room for the game by Weiwei Huang? We have solved all 16 levels, parts, chapters, levels and stages. Gameplay video with explanations and full walkthrough. Download the game from iTunes or Google Play app Store. Works with iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch or Android devices.
- What is the code for the purple box the only things in my inventory is the two purple dice and the piece of paper with., Escape Room: The Apartment Game Answers for the iPhone - iPad.
We had found all the keys that opened all the colored padlocks on the humongous key-shaped box that was supposed to be our ticket to the outside world. Exalted cries of “woohoo, we did it!” echoed throughout the apartment. We kept pressing the “Exit” button, but nothing was happening—no door opened. Suddenly, everyone wondered if there was some other crucial clue that we had somehow missed. How were we going to escape?
No, this isn’t yet another mystery story. This is very real.
Last Thursday evening, Congress of the South 40 organized a trip to Escape the Room, an interactive adventure game in downtown St. Louis. After waking up at 4:30 p.m., however, I was pretty sure that I wasn’t going to be able to participate in this new experience, as the buses had just left to go to 1201 Washington Ave. Fortunately, a 20-minute cab ride later I somehow made it in time to “The Apartment,” one of the most popular “rooms” at Escape.
For those of you who aren’t familiar with Escape the Room, it has four different settings where you can unleash your puzzle-solving abilities, brainpower and teamwork to escape a situation you have been trapped in for 60 minutes. You’re probably wondering what could be so challenging about getting yourself and your teammates out of a locked apartment in 60 minutes using a bunch of clues and objects. You may think it’s probably just another treasure hunt. I assure you it is not.
The game began with 10 of us entering a typical St. Louis-style apartment: “small, intimate and full of roommates,” as their website put it. We were told that we had an hour to find clues in the apartment that would help us unlock a giant key-shaped lockbox and lead us to the exit.
And so we started. It was a one-room, kitchen and bathroom setup. We were greeted by the sight of a cozy couch with multiple colored and numbered cushions, flanked by a table in the foyer which was strewn with family pictures and randomly placed objects such as a wallet, a tablet and a restaurant menu.
Further inside the apartment was a TV area and a bookshelf with an assortment of intriguing books, all hardback and somewhat musty, right across from a chessboard placed strategically on a side table, with a trophy carelessly tossed in between the chess pieces. To the left, the apartment branched off into a somewhat dingy kitchen replete with appliances, an interesting choice of food (rice, frozen pizzas and eggs) and a small dining table set with chipped wooden chairs.
All the way to the right, on the other end, was a bathroom with a tiny shower stall. And, of course, the most important part of the room—the screen that showed us the time remaining and spewed random hints based on our progress.
Now, I don’t want to spoil the game for you, but essentially, it was a matter of figuring out how we could use seemingly normal numbers and plug them into different scenarios using previous clues to unlock multiple keys, pass-codes and further clues that could help us unlock the huge key-shaped box that said “EXIT.”
Overall, we had to use some pretty out of the box ideas and quick thinking to put together clues from various places and use clues that we already had. We navigated through electronic tablets, rice packets, DVDs and microwaves and rummaged through bookshelves, kitchen cabinets and much more. We even took phone calls from a restaurant that was about to bring in a delivery. To be honest, we never looked at the time remaining because we got so involved that we just kept finding clue after clue due to our amazing teamwork.
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Up until the point when we were down to the last two steps, I had only been helping people find clues. But I felt thrilled when I found one myself. It was the last key to the puzzle, and it unlocked the big key-shaped EXIT lockbox. This was when everyone began to feel good about having unlocked the EXIT box, except it didn’t lead us out anywhere.
Plot twist: there was another numeric keypad inside the lockbox that required a four-digit code. The blinking red light and countdown beeps created a very time-bomb-esque scenario. Though some members were shouting random numbers that we had encountered previously, some of us scrutinized the fine print on the numeric keypad, which had a website URL on it. We decided to use that as our last clue and voila—we had escaped the room!
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That we managed to escape in 49 minutes was a surprise in itself—I also never expected we would be the first team to escape. Well, I guess it just goes to show that with good group effort and some presence of mind, it’s not all that hard to escape—especially when you have the minds of 10 smart Washington University students working together. All in all, if you’re looking for a study break during finals that keeps your mind sharp, look no further than Escape the Room.