Compara los precios de Escape From Mystwood Mansion en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Lost Sock Studio. Publicado por Lost Sock Studio. Lanzado el 27/9/2023. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie.

A debut from a two-person Swedish studio that quietly nails what most physical escape rooms get wrong - five rooms of interlocking padlock puzzles, zero filler, and a hint system with no cooldown or shame.

I went in expecting a modest little indie curiosity and came out genuinely impressed by how much craft a two-person team packed into a single mansion. Lost Sock Studio is about as small as game development gets, and Escape From Mystwood Mansion is their first release - which makes the polish here feel almost unreasonably earned. You arrive as a delivery driver, the front door swings shut behind you, and the notes start arriving. Someone is watching through security cameras, calling you Subject 83. The implication is quiet but unsettling: you are not the first, and the house has been waiting. The structure is five rooms, each one a self-contained puzzle cluster that must be solved before the next door opens. The entrance hall eases you in gently - a few keys to locate, one hanging in plain sight on an upper landing, others requiring a bit more attention - but the difficulty curve rises steadily from there. Puzzles lean hard into pattern recognition and code-cracking: Morse code, Pigpen cipher, Braille, anamorphic text, negative space riddles, symbol matching. Most of them funnel toward the same output (a number or letter combination to open a padlock), but the routes to that output vary enough that no two puzzles feel like repetition. A pen and paper beside you is genuinely recommended - not because the game demands it, but because the satisfaction of writing down a clue and watching it click into place is half the joy. The object-handling system is where things get a little wobbly. You can pick up nearly anything in a room, which is essential to the exploration loop, but placing items back down is fussier than it should be. The engine requires a ghost-image preview to appear before an object will settle onto a surface, and coaxing that preview out of a crowded tabletop can involve more cursor micro-adjustments than the puzzle itself. Drop something carelessly on the floor and it becomes easy to lose track of it later. It is a real friction point in an otherwise smooth experience, and the one area where the debut-studio seams show. The hint system, by contrast, is handled with real thoughtfulness. Three tiers per puzzle, no cooldown, no score penalty, and the hints disappear automatically once a puzzle is solved so the menu never clutters with already-solved items. The game also has no time limit, which either sounds like relief or heresy depending on how seriously you take escape-room rules. For anyone who wants the logic satisfaction without the clock anxiety, this is the right call. One genuine caveat: the puzzles and hints are built around English-language literacy. Non-native speakers may find themselves translating on top of deciphering, which adds an unintended layer of difficulty the game does not account for. Runtime lands somewhere between two and five hours depending on puzzle speed and how thoroughly you hunt the three hidden secrets that unlock a bonus room beyond the main ending. Speedrunners have cleared it in under an hour. The alternate ending requires keeping track of your delivery package through the entire game - forget it and the only fix is a full restart, which is the one design choice that left a sour note in an otherwise considered experience. Steam user sentiment sits at 92% positive across nearly 800 reviews, which for a niche genre title from an unknown studio is a meaningful signal. Kai, Scout Team

Escape From Mystwood Mansion

Escape From Mystwood Mansion

27 sept 2023Lost Sock Studio
GamerScout opina

A debut from a two-person Swedish studio that quietly nails what most physical escape rooms get wrong - five rooms of interlocking padlock puzzles, zero filler, and a hint system with no cooldown or shame.

PC
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
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€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €0.48

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I went in expecting a modest little indie curiosity and came out genuinely impressed by how much craft a two-person team packed into a single mansion. Lost Sock Studio is about as small as game development gets, and Escape From Mystwood Mansion is their first release - which makes the polish here feel almost unreasonably earned. You arrive as a delivery driver, the front door swings shut behind you, and the notes start arriving. Someone is watching through security cameras, calling you Subject 83. The implication is quiet but unsettling: you are not the first, and the house has been waiting. The structure is five rooms, each one a self-contained puzzle cluster that must be solved before the next door opens. The entrance hall eases you in gently - a few keys to locate, one hanging in plain sight on an upper landing, others requiring a bit more attention - but the difficulty curve rises steadily from there. Puzzles lean hard into pattern recognition and code-cracking: Morse code, Pigpen cipher, Braille, anamorphic text, negative space riddles, symbol matching. Most of them funnel toward the same output (a number or letter combination to open a padlock), but the routes to that output vary enough that no two puzzles feel like repetition. A pen and paper beside you is genuinely recommended - not because the game demands it, but because the satisfaction of writing down a clue and watching it click into place is half the joy. The object-handling system is where things get a little wobbly. You can pick up nearly anything in a room, which is essential to the exploration loop, but placing items back down is fussier than it should be. The engine requires a ghost-image preview to appear before an object will settle onto a surface, and coaxing that preview out of a crowded tabletop can involve more cursor micro-adjustments than the puzzle itself. Drop something carelessly on the floor and it becomes easy to lose track of it later. It is a real friction point in an otherwise smooth experience, and the one area where the debut-studio seams show. The hint system, by contrast, is handled with real thoughtfulness. Three tiers per puzzle, no cooldown, no score penalty, and the hints disappear automatically once a puzzle is solved so the menu never clutters with already-solved items. The game also has no time limit, which either sounds like relief or heresy depending on how seriously you take escape-room rules. For anyone who wants the logic satisfaction without the clock anxiety, this is the right call. One genuine caveat: the puzzles and hints are built around English-language literacy. Non-native speakers may find themselves translating on top of deciphering, which adds an unintended layer of difficulty the game does not account for. Runtime lands somewhere between two and five hours depending on puzzle speed and how thoroughly you hunt the three hidden secrets that unlock a bonus room beyond the main ending. Speedrunners have cleared it in under an hour. The alternate ending requires keeping track of your delivery package through the entire game - forget it and the only fix is a full restart, which is the one design choice that left a sour note in an otherwise considered experience. Steam user sentiment sits at 92% positive across nearly 800 reviews, which for a niche genre title from an unknown studio is a meaningful signal.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Escape RoomCode-BreakingHidden SecretsMultiple EndingsNo Time LimitCipher PuzzlesCozy HorrorObject Manipulation

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10 (64bit)
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 660 or equivalent
Processor
Intel i3 4130 or equivalent

Recomendados

OS
Window 10 (64bit)
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 970 or equivalent
Processor
Intel i5-4690K or equivalent

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Lost Sock Studio
Distribuidora
Lost Sock Studio
Fecha de lanzamiento
27 sept 2023

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Escape From Mystwood Mansion está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Escape From Mystwood Mansion?

Escape From Mystwood Mansion se lanzó el 27 de septiembre de 2023.

¿Quién desarrolló Escape From Mystwood Mansion?

Escape From Mystwood Mansion fue desarrollado por Lost Sock Studio.