T.R.A.P.T. is a spy thriller you play at home, on your computer and your phone. A real operation that unfolds in real time — and when your handler needs you, your phone actually rings.
BEGIN THE OPERATION — $19.99If T.R.A.P.T. is ever compromised, Project Phoenix is automatically initiated. All known agents could be compromised. Operations are transferred to an unregistered reserve operative until the global network is restored.
Most escape rooms hand you a puzzle and a timer. This one supplies you with a handler. She calls your real number at the moments that matter — when the plan changes, when she's cornered, when she needs you to move now. She'll call. You'll answer. You'll take notes. You'll forget you're playing a game.
Your laptop (or desktop) is the terminal — a full agency desktop of tools, maps and surveillance feeds. Your phone is the Field Kit, buzzing with comms from operatives in the field. What you do on one changes the other.
Trace a corrupted signal to a city. Bring a reactor back online. Run a dead drop. Explore an evacuated facility — in full 3D.
Close the laptop and walk away. Come back tomorrow. Every window, every message, every door you unlocked is exactly where you left it. Play in one sitting or several sessions.
After purchase your operative credentials arrive by email, along with your mission briefing. They're unique to you.
The code isn't handed to you. Part of it arrives in your briefing email. The rest will have to be reconstructed by you before the terminal will open.
She makes contact on your real phone, and the operation begins. From there it's you, the network, and a fight to take it back.
No. Everything runs in your browser — on both the computer and the phone. There's no app, no download, and nothing to set up.
Yes. You'll give us a phone number, and at key moments in the story it will ring, and a character will be on the line. It's the part people remember.
Yes — it plays beautifully with a partner or a small team gathered around one screen, with the phone passed between you. It also works solo, if you're brave.
No. Your progress is saved. Close everything, come back days later, and the operation resumes exactly where you left it.
You're never truly alone — your handler and the operatives in the field will nudge you when you stall. And you can always call Nova.