
Murder mystery pop-up inspired by K-drama Nine Puzzles lets you take a shot at playing detective , Entertainment News
When it comes to dealing with logic and puzzle-solving, I like to think I'm not the most proficient — evidenced by how I've never successfully completed those tricky escape-room missions.
So when I got the invitation to go investigate a whole 'crime scene', I thought, "No way, the murder's going to go unsolved". But perhaps with teamwork, I might have a better shot at this 'detective' gig.
Today (May 23), my colleague Jeng Jee and I visited the free Nine Puzzles: Decoded pop-up experience located at Plaza Singapura, before it opens to the public, to solve a string of riddles that follows an intriguing crime storyline.
Inspired by Disney+'s new K-drama Nine Puzzles starring Kim Da-mi and Son Suk-ku, the 'investigation' begins when a 'murder' is discovered. Answer a series of questions and you'll receive the first puzzle piece. There are a total of nine zones where you'd have to scrutinise crime scene photos, look for clues, decipher codes and analyse the suspects.
Walking to the pop-up, we were greeted by an ominous red curtain that leads into a dark room with a TV playing video clips of the drama Nine Puzzles.
Jeng Jee and I were bathed in red light and could barely see each other, until we were handed nifty mini flashlights by the event crew. They also gave us a bulky case file each filled with papers of the puzzles we had to solve, along with a pen and puzzle frame. After solving each, we would be given a puzzle piece and there are eight to collect.
Thereafter, we were on our own.
In the zones, we were to complete tasks like spot the differences, memorise variables as fast as possible, match and organise cards, and shine UV torchlights on objects to look for fingerprints.
Our observation and memory skills were really put to the test, forcing me and Jeng Jee to put our answers together to get through some of the puzzles.
But what's a pop-up without a photo op? We were drawn to the section What Happens Next which was pretty crowded as it had a little TV set everyone was trying to peek at for clues and a dainty little chair to sit and take pictures on.
Anyway, if you're anything like me (bad at puzzles), you'll be pleased to know that this zone gives you a mental break and you don't actually need to decode anything to get your puzzle piece — just soak in the good acting on screen!
After getting all eight puzzle pieces, we submitted it to a crew member dressed in an officer jacket. Afterwards, he directed us to another 'officer' who instructed us to get our complimentary mugshot or profiler photo taken.
Overall, had it not been for my teamwork with Jeng Jee, I'm confident I would've given up halfway. I highly recommend you visit this pop-up with a friend and laugh at each other's intellectual blunders like we did and have an immersive taste of the detective life for the day.
To try your shot at being a sleuth, head down to the pop-up located at Plaza Singapura B2-17/18. It runs from May 24 to June 10, and is open from 3pm - 9pm on weekdays and 11am - 10pm on weekends.
Mystery thriller Nine Puzzles follows Yoon E-na (Da-mi), who discovers the body of her murdered uncle next to a single puzzle piece and is deemed the sole witness to the murder case. The case remains unsolved. A decade later, detective Kim Han-saem (Suk-ku) who had initially suspected E-na as the murderer, is surprised when she shows up as a criminal profiler in his unit.
Together, they try to uncover the secrets behind a series of murders.
Nine Puzzles, which also stars Kim Sung-kyun and Hyun Bong-sik, is now available for streaming exclusively on Disney+. It also features cameo appearances from Park Sung-woong, Lee Sung-min, Hwang Jung-min, Lee Hee-joon as well as Ji Jin-hee.
[[nid:717998]]
kristy.chua@asiaone.com
No part of this article can be reproduced without permission from AsiaOne.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
4 hours ago
- Straits Times
Mixed reactions as young girl serenades delayed Delta flight with Moana song
The girl was singing to a planeload of passengers enduring more than four hours of delay. PHOTOS: JOECHRISTIANGUY, DRUZIROAMING/TIKTOK A young girl serenaded passengers on a Delta flight that had been delayed for over four hours with a song from the movie Moana – and not everyone got that warm, fuzzy Disney feeling. Clips of the girl singing the 2.5-minute long How Far I'll Go from Moana have gone viral. One video posted by TikTok user druziroaming has garnered over 31 million views as at June 1. In the caption, the user said the Delta flight bound for Orlando, Florida, was delayed for two hours and had to circle for two more hours due to bad weather before it could finally land. 'When your flight gets delayed by 2 hours and you circle Orlando for another 2… But then a little girl sings Moana on the crew mic and suddenly everything feels okay,' the user wrote. The girl's performance was meant to ease the tension and tedium on the flight, akin to that spontaneous outburst of joyful singing in 2014 by the cast of The Lion King on a flight home from Brisbane, Australia. But it instead left the internet debating over good intentions, passenger rights and flight mismanagement. 'We were delayed by about… an hour and a half, two hours to even get on the plane,' another TikTok user, named Stephanie, recounted. 'So tensions are already high. People are pissed, they've missed connections, and some people just wanna get home.' Describing the atmosphere on the stalled plane as 'really hot' and 'packed', Stephanie said she was anxiously awaiting an update from the crew, 'when all of a sudden (a flight attendant) shares with us that they have a sweet little girl that would love to share, or sing, a song with us'. The girl was handed the flight crew's intercom system, and she started singing. Some passengers went along with it, quietly singing along during the impromptu performance. One passenger commended the girl for her 'bravery'. 'She's on key and on tempo. It could be much, much worse,' someone said in the comments to one video. But others were not as game. 'Flight got delayed and this little girl won't stop singing Moana,' read one TikTok caption. 'Get me off this plane.' Another said: 'This is actually my worst nightmare and personal hell.' A third labelled the scene 'torture', while a fourth quipped that they were 'still waiting for the parents' apology video'. 'No hate to the girl, but the parents should know how to read a room. not everything should be centred around your child. she isn't Moana, life isn't a Disney movie,' one social media use r said. 'The worst part is, if you're watching a movie on the plane, the movie pauses when someone makes an announcement,' another noted. 'So everyone was forced to stop what they were doing to listen to her.' It was not known what prompted the young girl to get up and sing for the flight, but a Delta Air Lines spokesperson told Newsweek: 'We appreciate the customer sharing her talents and apologise to our customers for the delay in their travels.' Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
5 hours ago
- Straits Times
Court orders K-pop girl group NewJeans to pay agency Ador $933,000 for each unauthorised activity
K-pop girl band NewJeans began independent activities after ending their contracts with the K-pop agency in November 2024, citing a breach of exclusivity. PHOTO: REUTERS SEOUL – South Korea's Seoul Central District Court has ruled that each member of NewJeans, the K-pop girl group under Hybe subsidiary Ador, must pay one billion won (S$933,000) to the agency for every entertainment activity carried out without its prior consent. The quintet – made up of members Minji, Danielle, Haerin, Hanni and Hyein – began independent activities after ending their contracts with the K-pop agency in November 2024, citing a breach of exclusivity. In January, Ador filed an injunction to block the group's solo activities and assert its role as NewJeans' management agency. According to a South Korean report, the Seoul court on May 29 accepted Ador's request for an indirect compulsory execution, a legal mechanism used to pressure a party to comply with a court order by imposing monetary penalties for non-compliance. 'Since NewJeans violated the obligations set by the injunction by performing under a new group name and even releasing new songs before and after the injunction ruling, it is necessary to impose indirect compulsory enforcement to ensure compliance with the order,' the court ruled. 'If the debtors violate these obligations from the date they receive the official copy of this decision, they must pay one billion won per violation to the creditor,' it added. The ruling does not apply retrospectively, sparing the five members from owing billions of won for unauthorised activities they have undertaken since unilaterally declaring their exclusive contracts to be terminated. 'Until a verdict on the first trial on the ongoing lawsuit regarding the validity of NewJeans' exclusive contracts is delivered, the members are prohibited from engaging in any entertainment-related activities without Ador's prior approval,' the court stated. In March, the same court sided with Ador in a preliminary injunction that barred NewJeans from signing individual endorsement or entertainment deals outside the agency's purview, further reinforcing the label's legal position in the ongoing conflict. NewJeans rebranded themselves as NJZ in February before the ruling. After the ruling in March, they performed at music festival ComplexCon in Hong Kong and debuted a new song, Pit Stop. They then announced onstage they would go on hiatus out of respect for the court decision. The second hearing in the ongoing main lawsuit to determine the validity of the contracts is scheduled for June 5. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
10 hours ago
- Straits Times
K-actor Park Bo-gum to hold fan meeting in Singapore on Aug 14
Park Bo-gum was last in town in March for French luxury fashion brand Celine's boutique opening at Ion Orchard. PHOTO: BOGUMMY/INSTAGRAM K-actor Park Bo-gum to hold fan meeting in Singapore on Aug 14 South Korean actor Park Bo-gum will make a stop in Singapore as part of his upcoming fan meeting tour, titled Be With You. The 31-year-old announced the itinerary through his agency The Black Label on social media on May 30. Park, who recently starred in the hit period K-drama When Life Gives You Tangerines (2025) with South Korean singer-actress IU, will kick off his tour in Yokohama, Japan on July 26 and 27 before heading to Seoul on Aug 1 and 2. He will then travel to Singapore to meet fans here at The Star Theatre on Aug 14. Ticketing details have not been announced. After the Singapore leg, he will head to Kaohsiung, Manila, Bangkok, Hong Kong and Jakarta in August, before travelling to Macau and Kuala Lumpur in September. Park was last in town in March for French luxury fashion brand Celine's boutique opening at Ion Orchard alongside South Korean singer-actress Bae Suzy, his co-star in the South Korean science-fiction romantic film Wonderland (2024). He is currently starring in the new South Korean action comedy series Good Boy, which is available on Prime Video, and is also hosting the late-night music talk show The Seasons: Park Bo-gum's Cantabile. Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.