Line 93: lat = reader_ull("Latitude").ToString() Line 92: zip = reader_ull("Zip").ToString() Line 91: city = reader_ull("City").ToString() Please review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code.Įxception Details: System.InvalidCastException: Conversion from string "" to type 'Decimal' is not valid. Description: An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. Server Error in '/' Application.Ĭonversion from string "" to type 'Decimal' is not valid. Our second location, featuring the Arcade and Zombie rooms, steps up the theatricality and quality of our rooms quite a lot! We also have two upcoming rooms that will be on an even higher level of craftsmanship and creativity.Conversion from string "" to type 'Decimal' is not valid. However, I understand that some players are looking for a more immersive or dramatic experience, so we will soon be providing that information on our website. This helps members of the group that are wary of weird new experiences get in a more comfortable state of mind so they can have a good time. We find that some corporate team builders and large, many-generational family groups prefer a milder theme with more accessible puzzles. For instance, you note that the American Revolution theme is milder than others, which is true. We've taken it into consideration and will be implementing more information on our website to lead customers to the room theme and difficulty that they prefer. Hi there John! Thank you for the feedback. Based on this experience, I'll skip their video game and zombie room. These guys are more ambitious with four rooms, but 2 of the 4 were pretty dull, and we haven't seen the other 2. Escapism has three rooms (one great and two mediocre), but at least they are trying different things. Unfortunately, they've only got one room. They've got the theme, props, difficulty and variety fo puzzles down. 60-minutes to escape has got a handle on the immersive experience. Unfortunately, the overall experience left us flat. The guy from Bend rocked the physical key puzzles. The people we worked with were great, especially for first-timers. In the end, we got out about 20 minutes early with a 4-person team. There were a lot of number/word puzzles, and some physical "get this key off this peg" puzzles. It was American Revolution themed, but the props didn't integrate very well. They advised us that it would be tough for a 4-person team to escape in time, and offered two clues with a "free pass" to skip. I didn't think you'd have needed that information, but apparently we did. One half of that couple was not born in the USA, and we joked about whether we'd have to know American History to answer the clues. It was their 4-10 person room (American Revolution). Since I'd already bought it, we booked our second voucher for later that night. They probably went home, ate dinner, went to sleep, and left nothing in their bedside journal about this experience. I think the two people we were with were equally unimpressed. Anyway, we got out with 5 minutes to spare, and I'd regretted booking two LivingSocial deals with Portland Escape Rooms. But the person who designed it had only one approach in mind. One pretty lame clue that we took a lot of time to figure out, because there were 1,000 ways to approach it. I don't prefer it! For the Kidnapped room, we needed a hint on one clue. This was my second experience with a "fill in the spots" system. Other escape rooms let you book the entire room based on the number of people, without forcing you to join up with whoever decided to walk in the door. It can be fun, great, terrible, awkward, impossible, annoying, or possibly other emotions. I'm not a fan of being joined up with random persons. We (2 people) booked Kidnapped when it was an empty room, hoping to have no one else join us. What I want from an escape room is an immersive experience, a variety of puzzles, new puzzles I haven't encountered, challenge, lack of red herrings, and x-factor. For me, Portland Escape Rooms was the most uninspired experience. For a more detailed description, see below: I've now tried 3 Portland Escape room companies for a total of 6 rooms. If you love escape rooms, or you've never done an escape room, try another option.
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