REVIEW · BRUSSELS
Discover Brussels while escaping the zombies! Escape game
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Zombie-themed puzzles are a great excuse to walk.
This Escape Game turns central Brussels into a 2-hour mission, guided by your smartphone as you solve puzzles and look closely at what’s around you. I love the way the game format makes you notice details you’d otherwise zoom past, and I love that you end with a photo recap. One thing to watch: the missions and extra app videos can eat time, so go into it with a steady pace.
You’ll start and finish at Place Fontainas (1000 Brussels), and the whole thing is built for a team of family or friends. It’s a private activity, so it’s just your group, and there’s 24/7 online support if you hit a snag. Before you go, note the main practical drawback: you must bring a smartphone with power, since the device is not included.
In This Review
- Key Highlights Before You Go
- Zombie Puzzles, Real Streets: What This Game Feels Like
- The 2-Hour Structure: How the Game Moves From Clue to Clue
- Starting at Place Fontainas: Meeting Point and First Steps
- Mission Checkpoints: Where the City Becomes Part of the Puzzle
- Timing and Pacing: How Not to Run Out of Time
- The End of the Game: Photo Summary and Finishing Back at Home Base
- Price and Value: Is $17 Worth It in Brussels?
- Who This Escape Game Is Best For (And Who Might Skip It)
- Practical Tips for a Smooth Brussels Game
- Should You Book This Zombie Escape Game?
- FAQ
- How long is the Escape Game in Brussels?
- Where does the game start and where does it end?
- What is the price for this experience?
- Do I need to bring a smartphone?
- Is online support available during the game?
- When can I play the game?
- What is the cancellation policy?
- How long is the game valid after booking?
Key Highlights Before You Go

- Smartphone-guided missions: the app drives you from clue to clue across Brussels on foot.
- 120 minutes to escape the zombies: a timed adventure that keeps your attention on the city.
- Solve puzzles by looking around: the game rewards real-world observation, not just trivia.
- Photo recap at the end: you get a wrap-up with photos after you finish.
- 24/7 online support: help is available if the app or a clue becomes frustrating.
- Game valid up to 3 years: you’re not forced to start immediately after booking.
Zombie Puzzles, Real Streets: What This Game Feels Like

Brussels is great on foot, but it can be easy to treat it like a checklist: see this, walk there, snap a photo, move on. This Urban Escape Games setup fights that habit. Instead of a lecture or a standard walking route, you’re given missions and puzzles, with a story hook about escaping Brussels while it’s infested with virtual zombies.
What I like about this format is that it turns sightseeing into problem-solving. When the app asks you to figure something out, you naturally slow down and scan the environment: street-level details, signs, shapes, and the small stuff that makes European city streets feel alive. That’s where the experience becomes more than entertainment.
The other thing that makes it feel practical is the structure. You’re looking at a clear time window (about 120 minutes). You’re not wandering aimlessly, and you’re not trapped in one spot either. You can move as a team, take quick pauses, and keep the momentum going.
The theme is fun, but it’s not the point. The point is the gameplay loop: move, look, solve, repeat. For many people, that’s exactly what makes a self-guided tour feel fresh.
Other Brussels highlights walking tours we've reviewed in Brussels
The 2-Hour Structure: How the Game Moves From Clue to Clue
This is a 120-minute escape game. You play using a mobile application on your smartphone. The app guides you through the missions, and each step pushes you to interact with the surroundings rather than only reading directions.
Here’s the flow you can expect:
- You begin at Place Fontainas and get oriented through the app.
- You then move around the city for a sequence of missions and puzzles.
- Along the way, the app may include short videos, and it may also ask you to search the environment for answers.
- When you finish the final mission, the game ends back at the meeting point.
- You receive a summary with photos at the end.
Time matters here. One helpful reality check from people’s experience is that the app can take longer than you think, especially if you watch additional videos and stop to look around beyond what the mission needs. If you’re traveling with kids or a group with different energy levels, plan to keep an eye on the clock so you don’t end the game feeling rushed.
The good news is that the app experience can allow you to carry on later if you didn’t complete everything within the full session. Still, don’t assume you’ll be able to finish instantly—treat it like a real timed activity.
Starting at Place Fontainas: Meeting Point and First Steps

Your adventure starts at Pl. Fontainas, 1000 Bruxelles (Place Fontainas). It also ends back at that same spot. That matters more than it sounds. A lot of city games fail when you don’t know where you started or how to re-find the finish. Here, the “home base” is built in.
At the beginning, you’ll basically need to do two things fast:
- Get the app ready before you begin.
- Make sure your team understands how you’ll work together.
A smart way to organize your group is to choose one person to handle the phone at each step, and give everyone else the job of spotting visual clues. Puzzles are easier when people aren’t all staring at the same screen. And because the game asks you to take a good look around, that division of roles helps you move faster.
Also, Place Fontainas is in a central area and is listed as near public transportation. That’s useful because you don’t have to add extra travel time to reach the game. You can come right from your next museum, café stop, or hotel neighborhood without overthinking it.
Mission Checkpoints: Where the City Becomes Part of the Puzzle

This escape game is designed so the city is not just scenery. The app pushes you to use what’s around you to answer puzzles and complete missions—so you’ll be actively scanning the environment as you go.
Even without a fixed set of “you will stop at X, then Y” landmarks provided here, the type of moments you’ll encounter are consistent:
- The app gives you a mission prompt.
- You locate whatever detail the mission depends on (often something you can see and read on the street).
- You solve the puzzle using that information.
- You move on to the next prompt.
The virtual zombie storyline adds pressure in a playful way. It doesn’t force you into jump scares or special effects. It mostly works like a framing device that keeps you motivated to keep going when you’d normally slow down.
One more practical point: because the app can include videos (and because those extra media can add time), it helps to set expectations before you start. Agree on a pace: one mission at a time, no lingering too long on optional content.
This is where the experience becomes either very rewarding or mildly frustrating depending on your style. If you enjoy puzzles and you like looking at your surroundings, you’ll feel like the city is handing you answers. If you’re the type who just wants a relaxed walk with zero problem-solving, you might feel like the game keeps pulling you out of pure sightseeing mode.
Timing and Pacing: How Not to Run Out of Time

The experience is about two hours, and that sounds generous until you’re actually solving. If your group likes to browse, watch every clip the app offers, or stop frequently to take photos, you can run into a time crunch.
Here’s the pacing reality to plan for:
- Give yourself a steady rhythm—don’t get stuck on one puzzle for too long.
- If the app offers additional videos, decide early as a group whether you’ll watch them all or use them only when needed.
- Keep an eye on time so you don’t end up sprinting at the end.
One important silver lining is that the app may allow you to carry on if you don’t finish in time. That flexibility can save the day when you’re enjoying yourself and want to continue later rather than abandon the game mid-stream.
If you want this to feel like a fun adventure instead of a ticking clock, build in a mindset shift: treat it like a game, not like a must-see checklist. Let the mission guide where you spend attention.
Other escape games and scavenger hunts we've reviewed in Brussels
The End of the Game: Photo Summary and Finishing Back at Home Base

When you complete the escape scenario, the activity ends back at the meeting point. That “return to base” style matters. You’re not left trying to figure out where the last clue was or how to get yourself back after the adrenaline fades.
Then you’ll get a summary of your adventure with photos. Even if you’re not the type to save travel brag shots, this is a nice built-in way to remember your route. It also gives you a sense of completion, which is a big deal with puzzle games. Otherwise, it can feel like you just walked around solving bits and pieces.
If you’re with kids or first-time visitors, this photo wrap-up can help convert the experience into a story you can share later. That’s one of the quiet strengths of a structured game: you leave with both memories and a record.
Price and Value: Is $17 Worth It in Brussels?

At $17, this escape game sits in a “cheap enough to try, structured enough to feel real” zone. The best value is not that you pay for a guide to talk for two hours. It’s that you pay for two hours of guided movement, puzzle-style engagement, and smartphone-led direction that makes you explore instead of just pass through.
A few value points to consider:
- You get about 120 minutes of entertainment and exploration.
- You have 24/7 online support, which reduces the risk of a game feeling broken.
- You get an end summary with photos.
- Your game is listed as valid up to 3 years, so timing isn’t as stressful.
But there are also costs you should factor in:
- No food or drink is included, so you’ll likely need to plan a snack or meal either before or after.
- You must bring your own smartphone, and your battery matters since the experience is app-driven.
So here’s the honest way to judge the value: if you’ll actually use the game to explore and you enjoy puzzles, $17 feels like a fair trade for two hours of meaningful walking. If you’re expecting a traditional guided tour or you don’t like games that ask you to solve things, the value drops fast.
Who This Escape Game Is Best For (And Who Might Skip It)

This is well-suited for:
- Families or friend groups who like doing something active together.
- Visitors who want a city experience that gets them looking closely at street details.
- People who enjoy puzzles and don’t mind working as a team.
- Anyone who appreciates private group play, since it’s only your group.
It may not be ideal for:
- Travelers who dislike puzzle-solving or need a very relaxed, low-engagement walk.
- Anyone who’s uncomfortable using a smartphone for an active experience (since a phone is required).
- Groups that move slowly and tend to stop for long stretches, since you can run out of time.
Because it’s listed as most travelers can participate and service animals are allowed, it’s generally inclusive for many kinds of groups. Just remember that “participate” still usually means you’ll be walking around for about two hours while solving.
Practical Tips for a Smooth Brussels Game
A few things will make your experience smoother right away:
- Bring a phone with power. The listing specifically says smartphone and battery are not included.
- Charge up before you arrive. Battery life is your real limiter here.
- Assign team roles early: phone reader vs. clue spotter.
- Keep an eye on time. If the app includes videos, treat them like part of the mission plan, not optional distractions.
- Plan where you’ll eat afterward, since there’s no food or drink included.
One more detail: you can play within very wide daily hours—12:00 AM to 11:30 PM—and the activity runs across the year range listed. That flexibility helps if you’re building an itinerary around meals, museums, or evening plans.
Should You Book This Zombie Escape Game?
I’d book it if you want Brussels to feel like a game you’re actively playing, not a place you pass through. The value is strongest for groups that enjoy puzzles, teamwork, and short bursts of problem-solving as you walk. The photo recap and 24/7 support are nice safety nets, and the up to 3 years validity removes some booking pressure.
I’d skip it if you’re looking for a classic guided tour with lots of commentary and minimal phone use. Also skip it if your group will struggle with time limits, since the app can take longer than expected when videos and extra looking around add up.
If you’re the kind of traveler who likes to look closely at a city and solve your way through it, this is a fun match for Brussels.
FAQ
How long is the Escape Game in Brussels?
The game lasts about 120 minutes (approximately 2 hours).
Where does the game start and where does it end?
The start location is Pl. Fontainas, 1000 Bruxelles, Belgium, and the activity ends back at the same meeting point.
What is the price for this experience?
The price is $17.
Do I need to bring a smartphone?
Yes. A smartphone and battery are not included, so you’ll need your own device and power.
Is online support available during the game?
Yes. 24/7 online support is included.
When can I play the game?
The listed opening hours are Monday through Sunday: 12:00 AM to 11:30 PM, and the activity runs within the dates shown (06/28/2020 to 06/16/2026).
What is the cancellation policy?
There is free cancellation. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
How long is the game valid after booking?
The game is listed as valid for up to 3 years.
































