Granny – The Escape Game

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Planning permission has been secured for a swanky new hotel in the heart of Bethnal Green.
One woman stands in the way of “progress”… Granny.
Granny lives in the last remaining house on Paradise Row, behind an abandoned bookshop. She’s barricaded herself inside, armed with a small arsenal of homemade defences, and is refusing to sell.
Developers who have entered the house to “talk sense” into her have come running out screaming — if they’ve come out at all.
Now the developers are desperate. They’re offering a generous reward to anyone brave enough to enter Granny’s house, survive the encounter, and convince her to sell.
Will that be you?
DISCLAIMER: There are unconfirmed reports of booby traps, an elaborate DIY security system, and previous visitors failing to return calls.
The Game
Granny is an escape room — but on an epic scale.
Instead of a linear sequence of puzzles across one or two rooms, Granny unfolds across an entire seven-room house. There is no prescribed order. You decide where to go, what to tackle first, and how to approach your mission. Those choices matter — and they’ll shape your experience.
The challenges you’ll face are far more varied than in a traditional escape room. We find padlocks boring! Expect physical puzzles, environmental games, hidden mechanisms, and systems that respond to your actions as the house comes alive around you.
This is a non-linear experience. Solving one puzzle doesn’t simply open the next door (in fact, all doors are unlocked throughout). Progress comes from exploration, experimentation, and piecing together the story. As you move through the house, you’ll uncover fragments of Granny’s past — and those discoveries can change what tools and information are available to you. Even the in-game clue system must be unlocked through your actions.
The scale of the house allows teams to spread out, split up, and work in parallel. Granny plays comfortably with as few as four players and up to eighteen, and many smaller teams complete the experience successfully. Success isn’t about numbers — it’s about communication, creativity, and how well you adapt under pressure.


