Exit: The Game is a mystery room/escape room in a box. In each game, you face a series of puzzles and mysteries that you must solve in time to 'escape' the room you are trapped in. There are more than 20 different Exit games, so you can always find one that suits the difficulty level you need! Here on the site, you will find our entire selection of Exit games.
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Exit board games are a series of small escape room games that simulate the experience of visiting a real escape room. Here, you must work together and through a series of clues solve puzzles to 'escape' the room you are in. Each game always includes various cards and other parts needed to solve the puzzles, and often you end up having to destroy some of the parts to solve a puzzle. The games can therefore only be used once and should be seen as an experience in the same way as a trip to the cinema.
Whether you are into the big brain teasers or just want a cozy experience, there is an Exit game that suits your level and purpose. With more than 20 different Exit games and even more on the way, there is plenty to choose from.
All Exit games have a "level" indicated by 1 to 5 dots at the bottom of the box. Here, 1 is the easiest games and 5 are the most difficult games. We have divided the games below into three categories: easy, medium, and hard – so you can quickly find one that suits your needs.
|
Easy |
Medium | Hard |
| Abandoned Cabin | Secret Lab |
Pharaoh's Tomb |
| House of Riddles | Forgotten Island | Forbidden Castle |
| Sunken Treasure | Polar Station | Catacombs of Horror |
| Dead Man on the Orient Express | Sinister Mansion | |
| Mysterious Museum | Theft on the Mississippi | |
| Haunted Roller Coaster | Cemetery of the Knight | |
| Stormy Flight | Gate Between Realms | |
| Enchanted Forest | Kidnapped in Fortune City | |
| Cursed Labyrinth | Return to the Abandoned Cabin | |
| LotR: Shadow over Middle-Earth |
In each game, a small book, a series of cards, a code wheel, and a number of other items are included, which are needed to solve the game's puzzles. By examining the book, drawing mystery cards, and thinking and combining, you find numbers that are entered into the code wheel, which allows you to draw result cards that advance the story (unless you are wrong, in which case you have to go back to work again). If you are hopelessly stuck on a puzzle, you can draw help cards and get clues on how to complete it, so you don't have to give up – but of course, it is most satisfying to get through without help.
The tasks in the Exit games generally vary nicely between logical puzzles and tasks that require creativity. You often have to think abstractly, and in each game, you also end up using and combining the game's components in new and surprising ways to move forward. In the video below, you can see an example of how an Exit game works without having to worry about spoilers!:
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