The Floor is Lava can still be found in Las Vegas. Here are our recommendations for great escapes room in Las Vegas.
“Oh my.”
Location: San Diego, CA
Date played: December 3, 2017
Team size: 7-25; we recommend as many players as you can gather
Duration: 60 minutes
Price: $30 per ticket, $5 discounts for students, seniors, and veterans, or parties of 15 players or more
REA Reaction
The Floor is Lava was not an escape room at all. It was a human-scale social deduction game that happened to be at an escape room facility. It was massive and fun. The set was fantastic. I wish that it weren’t on the other side of the continent.
Who is this for?
- Social deduction game players, think Werewolf or Mafia
- People who can handle winning and losing like an adult
- Any experience level
Why play?
- It was a gigantic board game where humans were pieces
- Skill-based gameplay where we could build mastery
- The set
Story
The Floor is Lava was not an escape room. It was a social deduction game like Mafia, Werewolf, or Two Rooms & A Boom. The gamemaster secretly and randomly divided the group into two teams and assigned each player a special power. Then we chose our places on the islands. Falling off… or being “encouraged” off an island meant death… because the floor was lava.
Setting
The Floor is Lava was set within a volcano. There were islands (yoga mats) connected by illuminated paths that were safe to traverse. Everything else on the floor was – you guessed it – lava (shredded tire rubber).
Gameplay
The rules of The Floor is Lava were simple to learn and clearly explained in this video narrated by an amazing George Takei impersonator:
In a nutshell, as we entered the gamespace we reached our hands into a bag and each player removed on orange chip.
One side of the chip had a red or black dot on it. That indicated our team. The other side showed a special power that we could use for that round of the game.
More powers with increasingly complex and nuanced mechanics were introduced with each subsequent round. Two of the starter powers included:
- “Phoenix” allowed the bearer of the power to immediately reenter the game after being killed one time in a round.
- “Vindictive” allowed the bearer of the power to name any other player to die too, upon the bearer’s death .
The gameplay was simple. If I was standing on an island with another player I could ask to share my chip with them. We could:
- Share team
- Share power
- Share all
Once a duo committed to a share, there was no backing out.
“Combat” within The Floor is Lava took the form of hip-checking. We could not use our arms, but we could bump other players off of an island with our hips.
If we touched the floor at any point in the game for any reason, we were out… because the floor was lava.
Once out, dead players could impact the game by voting to send dead players back in and by voting to sink or surface islands.
Standouts
Everyone had a ton of fun. Whether a player was introverted or extroverted, passive or confrontational, The Floor is Lava was entertaining.
The set was incredible. It glowed. It was gorgeous.
The set was also comfortable on our unshod feet. Puzzalarium constructed yoga-mat islands and tire-rubber lava. We could balance, jump, or fall without injury. We never had to worry while strategizing gameplay.
In each round, we each drew a power and a team. The powers were awesome. They balanced each other. They also forced us to continually change our own gameplay strategy. There were some seriously entertaining powers.
Puzzalarium introduced The Floor is Lava through an entertaining and informative video. From there, our gamemaster added more complexity with each round. The Floor is Lava could quickly become overly complex, with so many different “powers” available (at random) to the players. Puzzalarium’s smooth onboarding enabled us to just get a handle on things before they threw another wrench into our strategizing.
The Floor is Lava was replayable. In fact, I’d imagine the more you play, the more fun it could be. I would absolutely love to play it again with an experienced, competitive group. I imagine that the dynamics would change dramatically with a group where everyone fully understood the game from the get-go.
When we died, we could watch the game on a screen in another room and take actions that affected gameplay.
Shortcomings
While we did get to participate after death, players who died early struggled to be relevant and engaged.
The hip checking game mechanic meant that size was a huge advantage in the The Floor is Lava. Our group included some small women, a few big guys, and a lot of folks in between. To a large extent, size determined strategy. In some cases, it meant avoiding confrontation with the big guys.
It was hard to notice when an island was sinking. We would have liked more dramatic lighting or sound cues for that. It wasn’t fun to die on a sinking island, never having realized that we were in danger.
Due to the learning curve of rules, strategy, and tactics, the pacing was uneven. As an inexperienced group of players, most of the excitement didn’t unfold until the third and final round. Earlier rounds felt a little sluggish. I expect this would change with a more experienced group.
Tips for Visiting
- People will see your socks.
- Wear comfortable clothing.
- It’s a light contact game.
- If you have a group of serious gamers, think about booking a double session.
Book your hour with Puzzalarium’s The Floor is Lava, and tell them that the Room Escape Artist sent you.
Disclosure: Puzzalarium comped our tickets for this game.