Your escape room games might not be yours.
That license agreement you signed? The venue probably owns your puzzles. Let's find out before it's too late.
The IP clause that steals your games
You spend months designing 'Pirate's Curse.' The venue loves it. Then you get a letter: you can't run that game anywhere else because the license says they own it. That's not a partnership. That's a trap.
- The venue claims ownership of your game mechanics and storylines
- You can't reuse your own designs for a new location
- They can license your game to a competitor without paying you
We highlight the exact sentences that give away your designs
Our AI reads your license agreement and flags every clause that could transfer your IP rights. You get a plain English report showing the danger zones, not a 50-page legal brief.
- See which clauses transfer ownership of your puzzles and props
- Get a rewrite suggestion for the dangerous language
- Know if you can walk away and take your games with you
How to find hidden IP traps in 4 minutes
No legal degree required.
1. Upload your escape room license agreement
Just the PDF. We don't need your game files or trade secrets.
2. AI highlights every IP ownership clause
We show you the exact sentences that could cost you your designs, with a risk score.
3. Get your plain English game plan
See what the clause means in real terms, and what you can do about it.
From designers who almost lost everything
"I signed a venue deal for my first room. The IP clause said they owned 'all game content.' I was about to walk away from my own business. Legal Shell found it and showed me how to negotiate it out. Saved my whole company."
"Our contract said the venue could 'modify and adapt' our games without consent. They were planning to change our puzzles and sell the design to another city. We caught it two days before the launch."
Don't let a clause steal your next game
62% of escape room operators miss the IP trap in their license. See yours in under 5 minutes.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney for legal matters.