It's the height of the Cold War and the news is not good. The commander of the launch facility was a double agent, and before he disappeared he set a nuclear strike in motion — the kind that ends most life on the planet. We're the military officials left in The Bunker with a ticking countdown and one job: shut it down before zero.
The set is the star. Fox has built a buried command post of switches, dials, blinking consoles and military-grade clutter, and the soundscape leans in hard — low hums, distant alarms, the sense that the walls are a hundred feet underground. The opening is deliberately non-linear: several puzzles run in parallel and only converge once the team has fed enough pieces into the main sequence. Translation — split up, work your stations, and shout when you find something.
It sits in the intermediate band and it's the sweet spot of the whole venue for me. There's real pressure — that countdown is not subtle — but the logic is clean and the screen-based hints keep you moving without puncturing the tension. Rated 8 and up and modifiable for younger recruits, it pulls double duty as a genuinely thrilling group challenge and a big-set-piece wow for families stepping up from the beginner rooms.
The Verdict
The Bunker is where Fox in a Box flexes its production values. If you've done a couple of rooms and want something that feels like stepping onto a film set with a doomsday clock attached, this is the one. We disarmed it with the alarms screaming and walked out grinning like we'd actually saved the world.
See how Fox in a Box stacks up across all eight rooms for the full picture, then reserve The Bunker and find out whether your team keeps its nerve when the countdown starts.
The Bunker — Good to Know
From HK$240 per person · 60-minute game · Kwun Tong, 4 min from the MTR