The Escape Game reviews

3.0

44% would recommend to a friend

(312 total reviews)

Mark Flint

48% approve of CEO

40% positive business outlook

The Escape Game has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 312 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The The Escape Game employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Arts, Entertainment & Recreation industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

312 reviews
2.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The Escape game, in theory, is a great company. The company is made up of people who truly care about what they are doing. I have met so many incredible people while working here. They are so on top of their standards and making sure every single guest has a fantastic experience, and from a guest perspective, they are absolutely perfect. I absolutely love escape rooms and will forever cherish getting to experience the behind-the-scenes of running one. It is truly a fun job, and would be perfect if management and the higher-ups could get it together. I used to love my job more than anything and wouldn't shut up about how incredible it was, but as I learned more about the company and have been dealing with staff changes, I'm starting to dread going to work. Working at a store with a good manager is truly make or break, and I wouldn't risk it unless you've heard from an employee that your store has good management.

Cons

They simply take this job way too seriously. For a minimum wage job, they hold employees to an extremely high standard and try to justify it by hosting stupid competitions that are supposed to promote well-being, but no one really cares about them other than the managers. The expectation that you have all of the mission, vision, and values memorized is insane. You get coached for the tiniest things. I understand they want to uphold an image, but do they have nothing better to do than sit on the DGPs and yell at the Team Leads the second something is wrong? That doesn't even begin to go into the cameras. They are watching 24/7, and you will spend every minute on shift on eggshells about saying something wrong that breaks one of the rules from the 80-page field guide. When you don't understand something, they get mad that you didn't already know that, as if they expect minimum wage employees, most of whom don't intend to use this as a permanent job, to reread their training material until it is memorized. I have had more shifts than i can count on my fingers that team members have cried in frustration with the work they had to do, and they managment acts like it's all in the name of making the guests happy. To be a good employee, you're also expected to go above and beyond and make birthday cards, fix broken rooms, and grow in the company without any additional pay or benefits. It is simply expected out of the kindness of your heart. There is no pay increase from learning one game to learning them all. Then comes growth. Becoming GES trained makes you stay the second latest and come the second earliest for every shift you're put on, makes you go through an entirely new training program, and learn entirely new programs. All of this work, and you get a couple of cents more. Then the next step is TL. At this point, you are basically doing a manager's work. You are there first, home last, and have to do a THIRD set of training. You are also answering to the company operations now, and will get torn a new one for every slip-up you make. Every angry guest, malfunctioning game, and short staffing is on you to fix, and doing anything wrong will result in paperwork, coaching, and having to write paragraphs to the higher ups about what went wrong. And what does this gain you? A couple more cents an hour. The one thing that I hate about the company is that they offer shared experiences ON TOP of their completely outrageous prices. I used to justify the price to people by saying it was such a great place to work and I see where all the money goes, but with my new management, this isn't true at all. They constantly understaffed and cut early to save every extra penny from getting in the pockets of the people who are making them all of that money. Save yourself the headache and work at a restaurant or something that has any semblance of work, like balance, and don't expect above and beyond from minimum wage employees they do nothing for in return. This job would be absolutely perfect and no complaints if they paid for what they are expecting. This is absolutly not minimum wage work, do better for yourself.

4.0
Jun 20, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Super flexible scheduling, any time off you need you can get Amazing team, everyone is extremely friendly, no drama and they have a knack of hiring great people. Management is very kind and has a positive attitude Growth is encouraged Games are fun to run and guests are typically excited to play Great to gain skills for a future career (to take to another employer) Not a toxic environment whatsoever. Very supporting and open management.

Cons

Pay is horrible and a joke. with that growth there is no meaningful movement in pay They can look at the cameras and use that against you Coaching can be too much at times It is true it does feel cultish if you do not buy into their values and just see it as a job. They don't tell you but they are grading all employees. It's your KPI score and it determines your upward movement within the company.

1.0
Jun 14, 2026

Toxic culture and poor pay

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people can be great when they are allowed to be, I met some really amazing people there

Cons

The company honestly just isn’t great. They’re expanding way too fast, opening multiple locations and running sister companies while paying and treating employees poorly. There are only two positions above the entry-level role, and the raises are something like 25 cents, even though you’re expected to take on an entirely new set of responsibilities while still doing much of your old job. They also expect employees to memorize company values and scripts, one of which is centered around honoring God. People can have whatever beliefs they want, but it feels strange how heavily it’s pushed in a workplace setting. There were also frequent issues with managers or higher-ranking employees pursuing relationships with staff, and the company didn’t seem to do much to address situations that made employees uncomfortable and don’t hassle harassment well at all. The “guest always comes first” mentality was taken to the extreme, even when customers were openly rude or disrespectful to employees. They never put their employees safety or comfortably above the customer. The biggest issue, though, was pay. One of my coworkers was paid below the legal minimum wage under the excuse of a “30-day probation period,” which kept getting extended. Something similar happened to me as well where I was promised one pay when hired and paid another. If you look up reviews from former employees, you’ll find that a lot of people describe the company as feeling cult-like, and after working there, I can understand why they say that. They are inconsistent with scheduling, they are not helpful in anyway way, they overall are a terrible company and I wouldn’t wish working there on my worst enemy. I do not understand how a minimum wage job can be this mentally taxing. I hope the owners grow up and learn that greed is a “sin”

Viewing 91 - 93 of 312 Reviews

Glassdoor has 313 The Escape Game reviews submitted anonymously by The Escape Game employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if The Escape Game is right for you.