![](/uploads/1/2/5/8/125864888/265739660.jpg)
A suave secret agent escape room. Use your Bond like detective skills to infiltrate enemy spy Ruby La Rouge's secret hideaway and put a stop to her evil plans before she escapes!Are your secret agent skills on point? Find out as you assume the role of Agent A in this award winning indie point & click adventure full of retro futuristic contraptions, hidden objects, gadgets and clever logic based puzzles. But do be warned Ruby La Rouge is no spy to be taken lightly! Explore a labyrinth of perplexing puzzles in this quirky game of cat and mouse that’ll have you wondering whether you’re the cat or the mouse!!Notice something strange or out of place?
Making mental notes and observations (like a good secret agent) will aid you in solving tricky puzzles later on. Skylar Summer, Mixed thoughtsAgent A was by far the most absorbing and intellectually stimulating game I’ve played on my phone. The puzzles are very well thought out and the developers of the game must have worked quite hard to make sure all the details worked together.
![Agent Agent](/uploads/1/2/5/8/125864888/738351288.jpg)
Almost every night at precisely 7:30 PM, the GPF uses Whizzy to send Jack the. From Whizzy, the map swallows Jack whole and sends him away on his missions. Agents, it contains top-secret gadgets necessary to foil bad guys and escape. Can you find the agent, overcome all challenges and preserve your spotless reputation? 18+; 3-6; 60 min. From €18 per person for a great adventure.
The game has great graphics, so many scenes and is a thrill to play, especially since there is a short introduction to every chapter, and throughout the process Ruby La Rouge talks to Agent A at sudden intervals, which prompts a slightly unnerving impression that you are being watched.My only disappointment was the abrupt ending that made the whole game seem a little less impressive and outstanding, since it was very quick and left a few loose ends. The previous chapters were solidly compiled with clear goals from beginning to end. Chapter five had missions, but the end made me wonder if there was something I missed. There were many reviewers complaining that chapter five wasn’t worth the wait, but I think the issue was mainly the ending that made the whole chapter feel fruitless since it didn’t lead up to a startling or climactic conclusion.I really hope there is a second game to follow. The developers are so talented and have created something golden here.
There is so much opportunity to take the story from here and make it into an entire adventure with multiple sequels! People will definitely appreciate and purchase it since it’s obvious this is a quality game.Wishing you the best of luck! Suzsho, Fun game and updated reviewUpdate #2: sorry it took me so long.
We now have the option to start at the new chapter without replaying earlier ones. Thanks so much for listening, Developers! Really fun game. Can't wait for chapter 5.Update: chapter 3 was excellent fun! But please give us the option to start at the new chapter if we've already played the earlier chapters.
More about this below. Thanks, Yak games! It's a great game and getting better with the new parts.Lighthearted room escape type puzzle game. You're an agent searching the home of a spy in order to catch her. She has secret rooms, safes, codes, etc.
The puzzles are fun. Not too difficult but still entertaining. I took off two stars for two reasons: it's quite short, and there's a very long lag time when moving from one room to another - it's sooooo slooooow - which definitely hinders the enjoyment of the game. Did anyone else have that problem? Developers: can you speed up the transition time? Other than that, a fun game that's short and sweet. Definitely worth the 99 cents.
Developer Response,Hi there, I just wanted to let you know that we had released an update a couple of months back allowing you to start at or replay any chapter in our brand new chapter select feature. Thanks for requesting the feature, we listened to everyones feedback.
We hope you can revise your review to reflect the features in our game, we appreciate your support. Thank you =).
Fog was a frequently used device in the 'B' thrillers of the 1930s and '40s. It was a way to disguise the cheap sets while adding an element of menace. In this low-budget tale of enemy agents on the dark, glistening streets of San Francisco, the fog is almost one of the stars. Nina Foch plays a World War II military nurse whose dream about a murder allows her to anticipate the real-life actions of the bad guys. It was just a single dream - never really explained - and otherwise she has no psychic powers. (She can't detect a spy hiding a few feet from her.) She's also not particularly smart, though no dumber than the federal agents she helps. The heroine's love interest, as well as the subject of her dream, is a a kind of G-Man played by William Wright.
He and his boss, portrayed by Otto Kruger, are at work on a plan to boost the war effort against Japan. Unfortunately, Nazi agents have compromised U.S. Security and are on the verge of foiling the plan and committing some mayhem. The dreamer comes in handy. In some ways, this movie is less 'patriotic' than you might expect. Unintentionally, it makes American home-front security in World War II look amateurish.
Everybody seems awfully naive. Wright's character gets a lot of mileage out of the little badge he flashes to local authorities, but it looks like a prize out of a cereal box. Most people would probably ask for more ID, considering that the fate of the nation hangs on his being legit. 'Escape in the Fog' has its corny and improbable elements, like most such movies.
But it's entertaining, and the cast is more than adequate. Foch is more vulnerable and appealing than in her later roles. Wright, who got his best breaks during the war years but died too young to make much of a career, does fine in a rather routine role. And it's nice to see Kruger, who often played icy Nazi sympathizers, as one of the good guys. This movie came out very late in the war, when the Nazis were already done for and the Japanese were only weeks from defeat.
It does seem odd that Germans instead of Japanese are shown working as spies for Tokyo. My wild guess is that Asian actors, many of whom were still getting parts in films about the Pacific War, were not available for the average inexpensive 'B' mystery.
In this picture, even 'Chinatown' has very few non-Caucasians, which actually prompts a subtle quip from one of the villains.
![](/uploads/1/2/5/8/125864888/265739660.jpg)