Nitr0 is the world’s greatest hacker, he’s successfully completed over 300 cyber crimes, yet the FBI doesn’t have any leads to his identity.
In fact, all of America might soon find it plastered across their TV screens. “Nitr0,” heard the name? If you haven’t, you’re about to learn.
You must work logically, interact with everything you find and solve puzzles to uncover the treasure! If you fail, the door will be sealed once more and you will surely perish!Ĭan you locate the journal, find the treasure and escape the temple before it’s too late? Time is of the essence! In your backpacks you’ve brought all the materials essential for your adventure! You approach the temple confidently, but once inside angered spirits awaken and deem you unworthy of the riches held within.Īs a test, they grant you 60 minutes to prove your worth.
Armed with the latest technology, your research points you to the exact whereabouts of the lost journal which holds the secrets to finding the treasure. Your team of treasure hunters decide it’s time to finish Tucker’s quest. While exploring an abandoned temple in The Lost City, he uncovered a treasure so rare, no man alive had seen it! A sudden gust of wind slams the temple door shut - sealing Tucker and his journal inside! Both were never seen again. His tales of adventure were known the world over and his prized journal documented every adventure. We were in New York, New Jersey and Michigan opening them for other people, and we came here and decided to open our own.Archibald Tucker was one of the greatest explorers of the 1930s. "We actually make them for other people as well. "Escape rooms are popping up all over the country," Miele said. So we suddenly have plenty of rooms to escape from. Miele has opened iPanic Escape Rooms inside the Charlestowne Mall, about a month or so after Catherine Arne of Elgin brought an escape room concept to Batavia. Nic Miele of Batavia is adding to the growing trend of "escape rooms" as an interesting activity for those who enjoy solving mysteries and puzzles - in this case, to escape a room within 60 minutes. "I don't think he wanted to go through this anymore, but he didn't like the thought of the alternative either."īecause of being members of a service club with them, I always knew Andy's parents and his late grandfather, Al Wade, far better than I knew him.īut it's easy to spot a good handyman when you see one, or a son whose parents loved him beyond measure. Charles apartment with his dog at his side. His body finally gave up on that routine a couple of weeks ago when his mother, Sue, found him lying on the floor in his St. His father gave him one of his kidneys in 2007, and it worked for nearly two years, when he had to get another through a program at Loyola Hospital.Īfter that one shut down, he essentially functioned without kidneys for the past five years, undergoing strenuous three-hour dialysis sessions a few times a week. By any name, it was a royal pain for Andy. Medically, they call it IgA Nephropathy, or Berger's Disease. About 10 years ago his body started treating his kidneys as foreign objects that didn't belong there.
Little did he know I would have never missed that tool.Īndy was following the footsteps of his dad, Jim Wade, who operated his Wade Services handyman business for decades before recently retiring.īut Andy Wade wasn't healthy, and we all knew it. He was an honest fellow, even returning one of my screwdrivers he mistakenly took home.