You must be age 15 or older to attend this show.This offer is not eligible for promo codes. Groupon is not affiliated with or sponsored by "The Dinner Detective Murder Mystery Dinner Show" - Colorado Springs in connection with this deal. The tickets identified in this promotion are made available through Goldstar. No meal changes within 36 hours of the event. No transfers less than 7 days before the event. Should you need to reschedule and it is at least 7 days before your scheduled event, then a $20/ticket transfer fee will apply. This policy includes all Dinner Detective shows throughout the United States as well as individual tickets purchased through brokers. The Dinner Detective cannot and does not offer partial or full refunds or cancellations of show tickets or packages. REFUND/RESCHEDULING/CHANGE POLICY: Once your purchase/reservation is complete, all sales are final. Prop guns, loud simulated gunshots, and short lighting blackouts are used as part of the performance. Minors must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. You must be age 15 or older to attend this show. The top sleuth even wins a prize package at the end of the evening - not to mention serious bragging rights. Between courses, you can expect plenty of murder, mayhem and hidden clues coming to light as you puzzle through the crime. The event starts out with a reception featuring tray-passed hors d’oeuvres, followed by the meal, which includes salad, an entree and dessert. In fact, everyone’s a suspect - including you. And since this comedic murder mystery is set in the present day, you’ll have no way of knowing whether someone at your table is just another guest or one of the talented cast of improvisers. Which is how I found myself inside what felt like a pneumatic bank tube, preparing to get sucked into oblivion.Now entertaining amateur sleuths across the country, The Dinner Detective makes its way to the Great Wolf Lodge in Colorado Springs to serve up a tasty whodunit along with a four-course dinner. So, after several hours splashing with them in the various pools below, I finally had a chance to climb the stairs to the “big kid” rides. But once we entered the water park, my land-locked Colorado-native kids were so fascinated with the wave pool (they excitedly screamed along with the other kids every time a wolf howl announced another set of waves), that they had no interest in the bigger slides. They loved wearing the wolf ears we were issued at check-in the nightly “jammie jamboree” dance parties the storytime in the lobby and the general excitement of the place. My three daughters, ages 3, 6 and 9, were having a blast down below. After a three-year, $100 million renovation, they were finally showing off to what looked like some very happy initial guests. The Colorado Springs site was built on a long-abandoned hotel lot next to Interstate 25, just north of the city. It was the grand opening for this Wisconsin-based water and adventure park franchise, now with 14 locations around the country. I was riding the Wolf Tail, a “nearly vertical, 20-foot free fall, followed immediately by a 360-degree high-speed loop, at Great Wolf Lodge Colorado Springs, a family vacation resort and conference center whose showcase feature is this 50,000-square-foot water park, heated to a humid 84 degrees Fahrenheit - a treat in the middle of the high Colorado desert. Then a robotic female voice began counting down: “three, two…” Though the outside shouts were muffled, speakers inside blared (cruelly, I thought) a thump-thump heartbeat sound effect, which made my own chest speed up. Digital Replica Edition Home Page Close MenuĬOLORADO SPRINGS - “Cross your arms and cross your ankles,” said the ride operator as the clear plastic door closed around me and the echoing cacophony of Colorado’s newest indoor water park disappeared.
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