Escape room or laser game in Brussels? Compare duration, price, minimum age and group size to pick the right activity for your outing.

Escape rooms rely on solving puzzles within a time limit; laser game relies on physical team action. An escape room lasts about 60 minutes, laser game is played in 15-minute sessions.
This article compares both activities by duration, price, minimum age and group size, to help you pick the right option in Brussels.
Choosing between an escape room and a laser game for an outing in Brussels depends less on which is trendier than on the type of group you're bringing. The two activities don't share the same pace, the same constraints, or the same target audience.
An escape room locks a group in a themed room (investigation, science fiction, horror...) with a limited time to solve a series of puzzles and get out. The game relies on collective thinking, observation and communication.
Laser game is played in an open arena, on the move, with laser blasters and vests. The game relies on speed, positioning and physical coordination, not problem-solving.
This difference in nature determines almost everything else: duration, minimum age, manageable group size, and acceptable noise level.
An escape room typically lasts 60 minutes of play, in a single room, with one group progressing together from start to finish.
Laser game is played in 15-minute sessions. At Laser Magic, most visitors play 2 sessions (30 minutes of play split across the 2 themed arenas), which lets you replay several times in the same visit rather than living through a single continuous experience.
This difference has a practical consequence: laser game adapts more easily to a flexible schedule (you can add or drop a session), while an escape room is booked for a fixed, complete time slot.
An escape room costs on average between €20 and €35 per person in Belgium, for a 60-minute session.
At Laser Magic, one laser game session costs €11, two sessions €21 — with no minimum number of participants. For a budget equivalent to an escape room, you can play several sessions and extend the outing with mini-golf or arcade on site.
Escape room works better for:
Laser game works better for:
An often underestimated point: an escape room with young children can go poorly, since the puzzles are designed for adult reasoning. Laser game doesn't have that limitation.
Nothing stops you from combining both activities on the same day if the schedule allows — an escape room in the early afternoon, followed by laser game later, for example. The practical constraint is logistical: it requires two bookings, in two different venues, with compatible time slots.
For a simple outing without complex organising, laser game has the advantage of combining several activities (laser game, mini-golf, arcade) on a single site at Laser Magic, in Machelen.
For an active outing accessible to all ages, a laser game session can be booked directly online.
An escape room typically lasts 60 minutes of play. That's a fixed duration, unlike laser game which is played in 15-minute sessions that can be stacked as you like.
An escape room costs on average €20 to €35 per person in Belgium for a 60-minute session.
The minimum age varies by theme and difficulty level, but is generally around 12-14. Laser game, by comparison, is open from age 6 at Laser Magic.
An escape room relies on solving puzzles within a time limit in a closed room. Laser game relies on physical action and movement in an arena. The choice mostly comes down to what the group prefers: thinking together or moving together.
Laser game is generally the safer choice for a group with children, since it stays accessible from age 6, unlike an escape room designed for an adult audience.