One hour, real teamwork, and a ticking clock. I like the staged rooms that keep changing the scenery as you solve your way forward, and I also love how the game is built around logic puzzles and story clues that reward clear thinking and group discussion. The only big drawback to watch for is that guidance can feel indirect, with limited back-and-forth with staff during the action.
You’ll meet at Budapest, Zichy Jenő u. 45 (1066), and then your session runs in one of their Budapest locations across District 6 and District 9. The room is offered in English, it’s private for your group, and it lasts about an hour. Just know that setup quality seems to vary by room: some visitors loved the atmosphere and puzzle design, while others flagged issues like dust/odors, visible wiring, or occasional tech problems.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Plan For
- Arriving at Zichy Jenő u. 45: check-in and first impressions
- How the 1-hour escape game actually works
- The puzzle style: why teamwork matters (and what to do if your group is mixed)
- Guidance and communication: the printed guidebook and host help
- Themes in Budapest: Avengers, Marvel-style worlds, and more
- Value and price: is $30.23 per person worth it?
- Timing, pace, and what to bring
- Who this is best for (and who should think twice)
- Should you book LockedMeIN Escape Rooms in Budapest?
- FAQ
- How long does the escape game last?
- How much does it cost?
- Is the experience private or shared with other people?
- What language is it offered in?
- Where do we meet?
- What are the operating hours?
- Do I need to bring a printed ticket?
- Are service animals allowed?
- Can most travelers participate?
- What if I need to cancel?
- How do you get help during the game?
Key Things I’d Plan For
- Multiple rooms in one storyline: Expect a sequence where you don’t stay in the same space for the whole hour.
- Team tasks are central: The games are designed around working together, not solo heroics.
- English-friendly sessions: The experience is offered in English, and hosts can support mixed-language groups.
- Limited communication style: You typically use a printed guide and a host-controlled help system (no obvious walkie-talkies).
- Varied themes: You can find popular pop-culture themes such as Avengers and Marvel-style variations.
- Budapest has three locations: Check-in is at Zichy Jenő u. 45, but gameplay may be in District 6 or District 9.
Arriving at Zichy Jenő u. 45: check-in and first impressions

Your experience starts at Budapest, Zichy Jenő u. 45, 1066 (Hungary). This matters because it’s a clear place to aim for before you head into the actual game space. The venue is open daily from 9:00 AM to 11:30 PM, which gives you plenty of options for squeezing this into a busy Budapest day.
In practice, your first minutes set the tone. You’ll typically be welcomed, given the rules of the hour, and taken into the right themed game. One practical detail: you’ll receive a printed guidebook for the room. That’s helpful when your group is stuck, because it gives you a structured way to progress without constantly waiting on someone to answer.
What I like here is that this isn’t a vague “good luck” setup. You’re guided enough to start moving, but you still have to do the thinking. The flip side is that some players have described the waiting area and room presentation as less polished than what they expected, including complaints about cleanliness or visible wiring. If that sort of thing matters to you, it’s worth showing up with realistic expectations and focusing on the puzzles rather than the décor alone.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Budapest
How the 1-hour escape game actually works
This is built as an approximately 1-hour experience with a clear goal: you need to reach the final destination before time runs out. The challenge is divided into stages, and those stages move you through more than one room. That’s a big deal because it changes how you stay engaged. Instead of doing the same kind of puzzle for 60 minutes, you get different interactions, new visual cues, and fresh story steps as you go.
Here’s the rhythm I’d expect you to follow:
- Start with a quick intro and your group’s setup moment.
- Work through the first room’s puzzles and riddles.
- Move into the next room, where earlier clues likely pay off.
- Keep checking the printed guidebook when you need a nudge.
- Push for the final destination as the timer tightens.
The games are described as story-based and logic-forward. In real terms, that means you should expect clues that require more than luck: you’ll interpret information, connect riddles to what you’ve already seen, and divide tasks so someone can focus on reading while others test ideas.
The puzzle style: why teamwork matters (and what to do if your group is mixed)

One of the most consistently praised elements is the puzzle design. Many players describe the puzzles as varied and “just right” in difficulty. That balance is exactly what you want for an escape room in a group with mixed experience levels. If one person has a knack for patterns and another is better at decoding, the room usually gives you enough opportunities for multiple thinking styles.
The games also emphasize teamwork tasks that bring the group together. That might sound like marketing, but in a good escape room it shows up as practical moments where:
- you need to compare notes,
- you need two people to run parallel tasks,
- and one clue only makes sense when you combine what different people noticed.
You’ll also want a group strategy from minute one. My simple go-to: appoint a clue reader, a try-it tester, and a time watcher. When you do that, you avoid the classic problem where everyone becomes stuck at once, staring at the same panel.
Still, a balanced note: at least one experience has been described as having technical problems and lighting/presentation that didn’t match expectations. If you’re the type who gets stressed by electronics that sometimes fail, you might want to treat this as a puzzle-first outing and keep your patience high when things feel slow.
Guidance and communication: the printed guidebook and host help

Communication is one of those details that can make or break the mood. The experience is designed so you solve the room yourself, with help controlled by a host. One account describes that there aren’t walkie-talkies, and the group uses a simple signal into cameras when they need assistance.
So what does that mean for you as a practical matter?
- Don’t count on instant answers.
- Treat the printed guidebook as part of your tool kit.
- If you need help, be clear and quick when you ask.
In the best moments, the host gives enough guidance to keep you engaged without erasing the fun of discovery. That’s the sweet spot: nudges that get your group unstuck, not a full takeover.
If your group is fast and confident, you’ll feel the adrenaline of racing the clock. If your group is slower or more cautious, the printed materials help prevent the frustration spiral. Either way, it’s smart to stick together in the room rather than splitting so much that nobody knows what stage you’re in.
Themes in Budapest: Avengers, Marvel-style worlds, and more
LockedMeIN Escape Rooms offers multiple themed games, and you’ll likely choose between options at booking. The titles people mention include Avengers-style and Marvel Infinity stones / Thanos-style themes. Other games referenced include Joker and Wizard World.
What matters for your decision isn’t the superhero name—it’s whether the theme matches what your group enjoys:
- If your group loves pop-culture puzzles, you’ll probably have fun with the story framing around famous characters.
- If you care more about the mechanics of puzzle-solving, the theme is still useful because it gives the clues a narrative shape.
Also, location matters for atmosphere. The rooms are in Budapest, with game locations in District 6 and District 9. District 6 is where you’ll check in (based on the meeting address you’re given), but the actual room can be somewhere among their Budapest branches. That’s why it’s smart to arrive at the meeting point a few minutes early, so you don’t lose time to navigating.
One more practical tip: because you’re in a themed environment, you’ll be using your eyes constantly. Good lighting helps. One account complained about how the cellar/basement setting felt (including smell and a less clean impression), so if you’re sensitive to odors or prefer bright, spotless interiors, consider that before choosing.
Value and price: is $30.23 per person worth it?
At about $30.23 per person for roughly an hour, this sits in the typical range for escape rooms in major European cities. Where the value lands for you depends on one thing: whether the room you get matches the best-case experience described by many players.
Here’s how to think about it:
- If you get a room with strong puzzle variety and smooth tech, it’s great value because you’re paying for an hour of active teamwork, not just entertainment you can do anywhere.
- If the room has visible wear, cleanliness issues, or technical glitches, that $30.23 can start to feel steep—especially if you expected a “best in class” presentation.
The fact that the experience is private for your group helps value. You’re not stuck with strangers who move at a different pace. And group discounts are available, which can make it more budget-friendly if you’re booking with friends or family.
My advice: if you’re treating this as a must-do highlight of your Budapest trip, shop your expectations. If you’re booking as a fun, playful puzzle hour between sightseeing stops, it’s easier to feel satisfied even if some aspects fall short.
Timing, pace, and what to bring

You’re looking at a tight clock—about an hour—so plan your day around the start time. With operating hours from 9:00 AM to 11:30 PM, you can usually find a time that doesn’t force you to rush through other activities.
What to bring:
- Your group, ideally with at least one person who likes puzzles and one who likes reading clues out loud.
- Comfortable shoes. Even if the rooms don’t mention heavy walking, you will be moving around and leaning into problem-solving.
- Since it’s private and offered in English, language won’t be a barrier if your group is comfortable in English.
Logistics basics are also easy. You’ll receive confirmation at booking, and there’s a mobile ticket option. Service animals are allowed, and the experience states most travelers can participate.
Who this is best for (and who should think twice)

I’d recommend this most for groups who want:
- a structured team challenge,
- a clear goal within an hour,
- and puzzle-solving that rewards communication.
It also seems like a good fit for families with kids, since popular themes like Avengers are often used in family bookings. The mixed-skill angle is important too: a well-designed room lets the whole group contribute, even if some people are escape-room veterans and others are first-timers.
Who might want to think twice:
- If you’re very sensitive to cleanliness issues or odors, because some descriptions include complaints about the underground/cellar environment and the waiting room/room presentation.
- If you get stressed by technical elements that may not always work perfectly, since at least one account mentions tech problems and exposed wiring that wasn’t handled in a way they expected.
In other words: if you’re there for the puzzles and story stages, you’ll likely enjoy it. If you’re there for a premium, polished production standard, read up on your specific theme/room expectations before you commit.
Should you book LockedMeIN Escape Rooms in Budapest?
Book it if you want an hour of hands-on teamwork, you like logic puzzles, and your group enjoys themed story setups. The private format, English availability, and staged rooms that keep changing what you’re doing are the strongest reasons to go.
Skip—or at least compare carefully—if you’re picky about cleanliness and tech reliability, because quality sounds like it can vary by room. The good news is that even the more critical comments still describe fun puzzle moments, so this can still work as a fun activity if you go in with the right mindset.
If I were helping a friend decide, I’d say this: treat it as a puzzle session first, theme second. If that matches your expectations, LockedMeIN can be a very satisfying way to spend part of your Budapest day.
FAQ
How long does the escape game last?
The experience is about 1 hour.
How much does it cost?
The price is listed as $30.23 per person.
Is the experience private or shared with other people?
It’s private. Only your group participates.
What language is it offered in?
It’s offered in English.
Where do we meet?
You meet at Budapest, Zichy Jenő u. 45, 1066 Hungary, and the activity ends back at the meeting point.
What are the operating hours?
It runs daily from 9:00 AM to 11:30 PM.
Do I need to bring a printed ticket?
No. The experience uses a mobile ticket.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes, service animals are allowed.
Can most travelers participate?
The information says most travelers can participate.
What if I need to cancel?
Free cancellation is available. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
How do you get help during the game?
You receive a printed guidebook for the room, and help is handled by the game host. One description notes there aren’t walkie-talkies and that you signal via cameras when you need assistance.


























