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Players in a room escape game find that they’ve been wildly more successful than they expected, and have escaped from the modern world into a realm of medieval fantasy.
The BEST sort of dungeon to hide your treasure in is one that’s always nearby, so if it’s hidden inside a song, all you really need to access it is a lute & the words. Anyone could do it. Of course, that just gets you through the door; You still have to sing, dance, and orate your way through the story, and unlike the composer, you don’t know the words.
Gelatinous Cube
Green Slime
Mimic (Creature which can look like a treasure chest)
Trapper
Piercer
Gelatinous Cube Swashbuckler (picture)
Local (to New Zealand) “Room Escape” attraction
The Last Starfighter
Dungeons & Dragons Cartoon
The Chronicles of Narnia, by C. S. Lewis
Magic Kingdom of Landover, by Terry Brooks
True Dungeon (True Adventures Ltd., who organise True Dungeon at Gen Con)
Psychosis (RPG Geek link – Best I could find for a 20 year old game)
Charles Ryan
Millenniums End (Drive Thru RPG link – Most succinct one I could find)
Mazes & Monsters
MacGyver episode “Passages” (The one with the Egyptian coma-dream sequence)
The Love Boat
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, by Mark Twain
Singstar
Crypt of the NecroDancer
Vampire: the Masquerade
Minds Eye Theatre
Bollywood (Genre Conventions)
Powered By The Apocalypse (Game Engine used in Apocalypse World & a bewildering assortment of other games)
Cats
Starlight Express
Musical Theatre
Libretto
English Light Opera (Part of the spectrum of Comic Opera; It’s what Craig is referring to here)
“A Policeman’s Lot Is Not A Happy One” (Stage Performance)
Mad Max: Fury Road
Operatic Japanese Trailer for Fury Road
Voltaire (Musician)