Designer & Developer

Escape Room 60

A faster Next.js rebuild shaped around how people book an escape room: pick a room, trust the reviews, check availability, and act.

The old WordPress site was slow, and the important stuff was too easy to miss. The rebuild kept the existing logo and brand cues, then rebuilt the homepage in Next.js around the few things visitors actually need to do: pick a room, check pricing and availability, or ask about an event.

The top of the page does not make people hunt. There is a booking alert bar, a book-now button in the nav, and two hero actions: book now or watch the video. The 60-minute countdown below the hero is a simple escape-room reference. It sets the mood and leads naturally into choosing a room.

The room section is the core of the page. Each room gets the same treatment: story hook, player count, location, image, a short review, and a Pricing & Availability button. That makes the three options easy to compare without sending visitors through a maze of separate pages.

Events needed their own path, so parties, corporate teams, and large groups are split into separate cards with separate next steps. The 1,500+ five-star reviews get played up as real trust proof instead of sitting in a tiny badge. Reviews, FAQs, the final CTA, phone link, and footer booking button all do the same job in different places: answer the obvious questions and keep booking close.

The site is built on Next.js with optimized images and a light page structure, so the room artwork can stay big without making the page feel heavy. Booking, gift cards, and waivers still hand off to third-party services, so loading and retry states are there to keep those moments from feeling broken when an outside request is slow.

Next.jsLocal BusinessMobile-FirstBooking Conversion60-Minute TimerEvent PathsGift CardsGoogle ReviewsFAQ

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