For a week, nothing is going to happen: I am irremediably late in the morning at work, my dark circles have reached a violet hue worthy of the Walking Dead zombies and my days are punctuated by totally absurd internet searches like "Casper mask" or " monstrous spider robot" . In question ? A totally addictive new game from PopCorn Garage.

play popcorn garage

A simple and totally addictive challenge

If you have missed the phenomenon, the concept is relatively simple: you have to find 66 movies using objects of all kinds, hidden and stored in a garage. If some people jump to the eyes like the right car, the manhole in the foreground or the small robot at the bottom left, others can literally become obsessions that monopolize the smallest part of your mind. Proof is: seven days ago, my only subject of conversation is whether: "the extinguisher is a film or not".

hehe extiting

A new social bond?

As a result, a gap has widened with my colleagues who do not understand my new fad. In parallel, I impose on my darling to see or revisit all the great classics of cinema over 50 years - although, I admit that we started with the eight opus of Harry Potter. I even canceled a vernissage Thursday evening, to spend the evening with my cinephile brother to whom I almost never speak. My life has completely changed.

help gif drole

The balance sheet

After a week, 78 games, 25 forums and / or comments and several extortion attempts, I managed to find ... 22 films out of 66. Officially, I slip to whoever wants to hear it that I am at 54 but I recovered the finds of the cinephile frangin (that counts?). So a dozen films to discover ... waiting for the second edition!

And 5 clues, because we're super sympa ...

  • The car does not just roll, it travels in time
  • The scarf on the bottom right is that of a sorcerer
  • The sewer plate is the gateway to the temple of the pizza
  • Yes, on the wall on the right, it is a graffiti of Charlie Chaplin with a kepi
  • Two gold palms hide in the garage!

enought fat amy

To test your turn: http://www.popcorngarage.com/