Skip to main content

Escape Academy review: Escape room fun, minus the stakes

A plaza in Escape Academy.
Escape Academy
MSRP $20.00
“Escape Academy delivers lovingly crafted puzzles that shine in co-op play, but it can't fully replicate the thrills of a real-life escape room.”
Pros
  • Well-designed rooms
  • Manageable logic puzzles
  • Great for kids and adults
  • Excellent co-op
Cons
  • Underdeveloped story
  • No real consequences
  • Very short

Sometimes, a no-brainer idea can turn into a deceptively tricky puzzle. That’s the case with Escape Academy, a new indie title that brings the idea of an escape room to your living room. It’s a grand-slam idea, one that the game achieves in many respects, but not without struggling to nail down a few solutions.

That’s not due to a lack of experience. Developed by Coin Crew Games, the first-person puzzle game was created by people who designed real-life escape rooms before the pandemic. Coin Crew wanted to properly honor that experience in video game form, replicating the satisfying joy that comes from solving an intricate puzzle box. Plenty of escape room fundamentals translate to a digital medium perfectly, though others don’t quite fit in as cleanly.

Escape Academy delivers expertly crafted puzzles that shine in a co-op setting, though it struggles to replicate the tension of a real escape room. With its limited number of levels and short run time, I’m already looking to sign myself up for a bigger, more complex sequel.

The art of escape

When the game begins, players are quickly enrolled in a university with the sole purpose of teaching students the art of escape. There’s a spy narrative through line to the game, which links its disparate puzzle rooms together, but it’s little more than a clever set dressing to create some fun tests. There are traces of creative worldbuilding, but they’re a little lost in the briefest of dialogue interstitials.

Each room is entirely distinct from any other, bringing a mix of inventive puzzles to match the theme.

Escape Academy excels where it counts: puzzle design. Throughout the game, players will solve just over a dozen puzzle rooms as they earn Pokémon-like badges. Each room is entirely distinct from any other, bringing a mix of inventive puzzles to match the theme. For instance, one room has me making a cup of tea. I’m dropped into a greenhouse with a stovetop in the center. Over the course of the level, I’m dropping tea leaves under a microscope and counting elements of its cells to deduce a lock combination. Another set piece plays out like an action movie, where I’m radioing numbers over to my professor as I watch her orchestrate a prison break via security monitors.

What’s especially nice is that no room feels obtuse or confusing, even the late game ones. I was never overwhelmed by having too many clues and objects I could interact with at one time. I’d usually have a few key items on hand at a time and some noticeable level design hints to direct my attention along. That especially makes it feel like a genuine escape room, as it’s not built to make you feel lost. If you see a piano, you know you’ll need to play it; it’s just a matter of figuring out what other puzzle will tell you the right keys to press. Even if you do get mixed up, a generous hint system offers clear nudges, making this much friendlier for players of all ages.

A row of computers show a puzzle in Escape Academy.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The first-person perspective works here too, letting players replicate the experience of anxiously pacing around a room. One especially small, but nice touch is the ability to pin a clue to the screen, making things like cypher puzzles much easier to complete without the need for a pen and paper. I wish there were more ways to write down clues in-game — my moleskin full of numbers and notes currently makes me look like a serial killer — but the puzzles are bite-sized enough that it’s generally easy to keep a short safe combination or shape pattern in mind.

Missing keys

It’s clear that the game was lovingly crafted by escape room experts as each level is packed with intuitive logic puzzles that are easy to love. It gets a little messier when it comes to replicating the high-stakes energy that real world escape rooms bring. In those scenarios, it’s a race against the clock with teams struggling to escape the room before they’re kicked out by the 25-year-old running the front desk.

Escape Academy isn’t quite able to capture that same manic spirit. Each level has a time limit and a clock menacingly counts down at the top of the screen, but it’s a placebo. If time runs out, there’s no consequence. The room just continues on as normal. The only downside is that you’ll get a slightly worse grade on the report card you receive at the end of every level.

There’s no good reason to pop back into a level aside from trying it in co-op.

Those grades aren’t exactly a strong incentive to do better. There are no leaderboards where players can compare scores or even room-clearing times. The lack of friends list competition makes sense, because once you’ve solved a room, there’s not much challenge left. You can easily replay it armed with every puzzle answer and get an A+ in minutes. There’s no good reason to pop back into a level aside from trying it in co-op.

That’s where the digital and physical escape room experiences come in conflict with one another. You’re only meant to do a real one once. The threat of a failure makes an escape room a thrilling night out, but failure isn’t as meaningful in a game. You can always reset or try again. In one room, I had to cut the right wires on a bomb. If I messed up, my only consequence was that a few minutes would tick off the clock. I could screw up as much as I liked until I eventually snipped the right wire. What was the game going to do, tell me I couldn’t try again unless I paid for another attempt?

Image used with permission by copyright holder

To its credit, Escape Academy finds other clever ways to bring a sense of tension. Real escape rooms can induce light panic, but it’s always a safe environment with low stakes. Here, players are thrown into a burning library or a series of slowly flooding rooms. Those scenarios make the race to escape feel more exciting, though that lack of a meaningful fail consequence proves to be a real challenge.

I wouldn’t mind that as much if there was a little more to the package. Escape Academy only features around a dozen rooms, most of which I breezed through before I hit the suggested time limit. It only took me around three hours to complete it. An epilogue would allow me to pop back in and replay old rooms at any time, but there’s not much fun in that.

The ultimate couple’s game

If you’re going to play Escape Academy, I highly recommend doing so with a friend. The entire story can be completed with two players in split-screen mode, and it’s where the game truly shines. While I mostly played the game solo, my favorite experience with it came from co-op. It’s the moment where the game felt the most delightfully chaotic as my puzzle buddy and I bounced around a room shouting clues at one another and trading notes. It joins the pantheon of top-tier “couples games” right next to It Takes Two.

Every little design detail stands out with two players. The ability to pin a clue to the screen works especially well in a split-screen setting where one player can hold up a note while the other solves a puzzle. There’s usually at least two tasks that can be completed at any given time in a level, which lets players divide and conquer without straying too far from each other. The more straightforward puzzle design also makes it an excellent option for parents looking to play something with their kid.

Players solve a puzzle in Escape Academy co-op mode.
Coin Crew Games

While Escape Academy can’t quite capture every nuance of the escape room experience, it nails the social component. It’s a game that’s best enjoyed as a bonding exercise. It’s an excuse to invite a friend over and chat after, much like an escape room night out inevitably ends in a bar. The short and sweet nature of it makes it a perfect complement to a social hangout session.

Just don’t play it solo first or else you risk becoming the obnoxious friend who keeps impatiently rushing your pal through puzzles.

Our take

Escape Academy is an endearing puzzle game that just wants to share the unique pleasure of escape rooms with everyone. Each well-designed level brings a set of clever logic puzzles that are always satisfying to solve, especially with a pal. It has a harder time bringing players a meaningful sense of failure, as the meaningless time limits suck the tension out of the room. Despite its struggles to nail down the energy of real-world escape rooms, it’s one of the most fun ways you can spend a Saturday gaming night this summer.

Is there a better alternative?

The Room series delivers incredibly strong puzzle box gameplay. If you’re looking for a longer, more involved co-op puzzle game, It Takes Two is the top of its class.

How long will it last?

It took me less than three hours to complete the game, though I’d done a few rooms previously during demos. Even so, playthroughs will top out around four hours with no incentive for replays.

Should you buy it?

Yes. Even if it’s short and imperfect, I had a wonderful time solving every room. Grab a friend and make a night out of it.

Escape Academy was tested on PC and Steam Deck.

Editors' Recommendations

Giovanni Colantonio
Giovanni is a writer and video producer focusing on happenings in the video game industry. He has contributed stories to…
One of the best Tomb Raider games is coming to Xbox Game Pass
Lara Croft runs from a crashing plane in Tomb Raider.

Microsoft unveiled the batch of games coming to Xbox Game Pass throughout the first half of May. It's a smaller group of only four games, but all of them are neat additions to Microsoft's subscription service. Here's the full roster of games coming to Xbox Game Pass between May 2 and May 14.

Tomb Raider: Definitive Edition -- May 2
Kona II: Brume -- May 7
Little Kitty, Big City -- May 9
Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons -- May 14

Read more
Is Stardew Valley cross-platform?
Stardew Valley Multiplayer Fishing

Stardew Valley is a game made by just one person, but it has seen more success than most games made by dozens, or even hundreds, of people. It's even one of Digital Trends' top 50 video games of all time. Since its release in 2016, the game has been updated regularly with new features and content to keep its avid fans coming back. This includes an online multiplayer component that allows you and up to three friends to hang out on each other's farms. And with the recent trend of games allowing players on different platforms to join together, you may wonder if Stardew Valley offers cross-platform functionality. Here's everything we know about cross-platform support in Stardew Valley.
Is Stardew Valley cross-platform?
Stardew Valley does not offer cross-platform support, meaning you can't play online multiplayer between any of the systems the game is on. So if you want to team up with some friends, make sure you all are playing on the same platform, such as the PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X, Nintendo Switch, or PC. Also be aware that whoever starts a multiplayer game is saving that shared world locally, meaning no one else can reenter that world without the host present.

The sad fact of the matter is there doesn't seem to be any indication that crossplay will come to Stardew Valley. The game's official Reddit still lists it as not being supported, and there was only one mention of it by the developer on Twitter back in 2018, when he responded to a question asking if crossplay would come to the game. He replied, "Unfortunately, there will not be crossplay. Apparently, the technical barriers are very high. It's still something I really want to add and I promise to look into it more closely, but first priority is getting the update out there." This was many years ago, and there has been no further information about cross-platform play since, so it seems very unlikely that we will see support for this functionality come to Stardew Valley.

Read more
The best external hard drives for Xbox Series X
xbox all access price pre orders retailers 2

The Xbox Series X's 1TB sounds excellent on paper, but in reality, Microsoft's console only offers about 802GBs of storage due to updates and the operating system. You may find yourself filling up your space quickly, especially if you're looking to download every new title that becomes available on Xbox Game Pass. Let's face it, Call of Duty alone takes well over 100GBs of storage — and with the system targeting 4K resolution, games are only growing in size.

The Xbox Series X is compatible with any external hard drive up to 16TB of storage. Games optimized for the Xbox Series X can only be stored on, but not played from, an external drive due to the games being designed to take advantage of faster loading speeds and Xbox Velocity Architecture. However, when it comes to storage for your Xbox Series X, there are many options to choose from as your game library expands. We have compiled a list of external drives that will make your gaming experience seamless. Note that they will come with the proper cables needed to connect to your Xbox console.
Seagate Storage Expansion Card

Read more