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Police Shut Down 3,000-Person Game of Hide-and-Seek At IKEA (housebeautiful.com) 88

An IKEA hide-and-seek game with 3,000 people was scheduled to take place in Glasglow, Scotland on Saturday, August 31, but police managed to put a stop to it before it even got started. From a report: The one-stop shop for everything home-related and also the ideal place for a 3,000-person hide-and-seek game. After all, the average store is about 300,000 square feet, while the world's largest IKEA is 700,000 square feet, and honestly, it's easy to imagine endless hiding spots. But unfortunately for one Facebook group, their planned trip to an IKEA in Glasgow, Scotland was cancelled after word got out about their Saturday event. Five police officers were called to the Braehead branch and remained at the store until the evening.

"People are stopping everyone who 'looks like they are here for a game of hide and seek,'" one person wrote on Facebook after stopping by the store, The Scotsman reported. The IKEA itself also had its own security personnel, and no incidents were reported.
The report says that IKEA management initially allowed hide-and-seek events -- a trend that began in Belgium in 2014 -- but were eventually forced to ban the events after they began getting out of hand.

"The safety of our customers and co-workers is always our highest priority," said Rob Cooper, IKEA Glasgow Store Manager in a statement. "We were aware of an unofficial Hide and Seek Facebook event being organized to take place at our store today and have been working with the local police for support. While we appreciate playing games in one of our stores may be appealing to some, we do not allow this kind of activity to take place to ensure we are offering a safe environment and relaxed shopping experience for our customers."
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Police Shut Down 3,000-Person Game of Hide-and-Seek At IKEA

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  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @02:22AM (#59168286)

    And the police shut it down. Really, where’s the story in that?

    • by fazig ( 2909523 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @03:50AM (#59168340)
      Make a story up.

      The police didn't shut it down, they participated. They found everyone and won. Or perhaps they didn't find everyone? And some of them remain hidden in that IKEA till today? Who knows.
    • by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @03:52AM (#59168342)
      The cops somehow managed to not kill any black people, so that's interesting.
      • Were the police attacked? No. Oh but you are a "libertarian" (a.k.a. doughy suburban white male) so you don't need cops. I forgot.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by markdavis ( 642305 )

          >"Oh but you are a "libertarian" (a.k.a. doughy suburban white male) so you don't need cops. I forgot."

          Your drivel gets really tiring. Perhaps a tiny percent of radical libertarians believe there shouldn't be police, military, and other important government services. By your methodology, I guess all "democrats" are ultra-left socialists/communists, who want to stop all free speech, obliterate private gun ownership by good people, want to ban anything that might remotely pose some theoretical "harm" to

          • by Cyberax ( 705495 )

            smart libertarians

            That's an oxymoron right here. There are no smart libertarians.

          • if you're not going to oppose those power structures? With all due respect, at that point isn't that really just a Republican that wants to legalize weed?
            • >" With all due respect, at that point isn't that really just a Republican that wants to legalize weed?"

              Republicans and Libertarians are both Conservative (small government with focus on freedom and personal liberty, and more constituionalist). So in that respect, they are very similar. There are some differences- Libertarians are less about "morality", so in that respect they are more like classical liberals. They also tend to be less interested in building or maintaining foreign influence (and thus,

              • by PLAST ( 416196 )

                In case of Liberal, you apparently already noticed it, as indicated by adding "modern", but your definitions of both "Conservative" and "Liberal" applies only to the US, based on the current political realities (including the flawed majority voting and resulting two-party system) and historical changes until the 1960s, with little change since then. Neo-Liberals (which is what I as a European would understand as "modern" liberal) would be US "conservative" according to your definition.
                They are essentially n

    • As people entered the store, how did the police differentiate the hide-and-seekers from the regular shoppers?

      • As people entered the store, how did the police differentiate the hide-and-seekers from the regular shoppers?

        Just look for singles.

        At the IKEA where I sometimes shop, nobody is there alone. It's husband & wife (of all genders) with or without kids, students who share an apartment or singles who bring a friend to give a second opinion.

        But I don't think I've ever seen a person alone there. There's always a companion who is asked, "We what do you think?"

      • As people entered the store, how did the police differentiate the hide-and-seekers from the regular shoppers?

        They were the ones with their hands over their eyes, counting to 100.

      • Couples where -both- people wanted to be there?
    • How sure are you about that? Perhaps they were just a lot better at hiding than the police were at seeking?
    • The real story is how 3000 people simultaneously fell for the police yelling, "Olly olly oxen free!"
    • And the police shut it down. Really, where’s the story in that?

      There is a story in that, but not News For Nerds.

    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      Nope, no story in that. Now if it was a 3,000 person paint ball game at Ikea, that would have been a story.

  • I think a 3,000 person game of "Pin the Tail on the Donkey" in an IKEA would be much more interesting.

    3,000 blindfolded folks wandering around the store with a paper donkey tails and thumb tacks ( UK drawing pins) in their hands.

    What . . . or even who . . . will end up being the donkey!?!?!?.

    Hilariousness ensues!

  • Solution (Score:4, Insightful)

    by dwywit ( 1109409 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @03:14AM (#59168316)

    1. Store closes at n o'clock
    2. Participants line up, pay a 10 euro fee for insurance, breakage, etc
    3. Let the game begin

    • by 6Yankee ( 597075 )

      "3000 people, 10 euros, that means I can trash 30 grand's worth of stuff!" x3000.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      1. Don't try to hide on social media.
      2. The UK police are very good at seeking around on social media.
      Recall what social media brand got on PRISM early?
      3. Let the code begin to make some kind of secure communications network :)
    • by Keill ( 920526 )
      Hide and seek? Nah - DEMOLITION! (Assuming anyone knows where my username is from, of course, and have read all the books.)
    • Stores and not insured for such a thing, and you'd need staff to frisk people on the way out to ensure they didn't have more than ten Euros in unpronounceable small items. Cost would be more than ten Euros each. And charging in Euros in Scotland would be very odd.
      • Stores and not insured for such a thing

        It's standard practice for a large group registering for an event to carry their own damage liability insurance. So if someone (or multiple people) in the group breaks things, the venue can be sure the insurance will pay for it even if the group itself can't. The problem is then shifted from the venue to the group - the group needs to qualify and pay for such insurance. Whether that raises their cost per participant above 10 Euros depends on the group, its history,

    • They would easily do more than 30k worth of damage to the merchandise. Bear in mind that Ikea is a furniture store: they sell new furniture, not beaten-up stuff that people have been jumping on and around in playhouse-style games. And a lot of their furniture isn't that durable to begin with.
  • Sure - most of the store would be fine.

    But there's portions of the store that blend the line between warehouse and showroom, where heavier equipment can be operating moving heavy mixes of lumber, metal and piles of stacked stuff.

    It's more than a few steps riskier than, say, a Walmart or most other big-box stores for folks scrambling for a place and trying to stay unseen.

    As long as they weren't arresting folks - seems a decent interpretation of f the call to 'protect and serve', compared to lots of stories w

    • by Calydor ( 739835 )

      Game begins in the parking lot. The cops and security are it. GO!

    • That makes sense. The more stupid players would just climb the shelves in the warehouse section [wordpress.com] and hide on pallets 6 meters (20 feet) off the ground. Other players could hurt themselves (and other potential customers) just running after each other. A warehouse is no playground. There is plenty of steel and cement you could crack your head on.

    • I don't think there are any big safety issues, it's kind of pathetic Ikea couldn't just say, "This is a business, we didn't sign up for this, you can't do it here."
  • You're supposed be a mindless consumer in a store, not to engage in social activities that generate no income for the store.

    Consuming is the new fun. Don't these people know?

    • 100 people playing hide and seek is a social activity. 3000 is a health hazard, and no you do not engage in health hazards in a store.

    • by tomhath ( 637240 )
      A store is where people go to buy stuff. If you want to play games, go to the park. Why is that a problem?
    • From TFS :

      The report says that IKEA management initially allowed hide-and-seek events -- a trend that began in Belgium in 2014 -- but were eventually forced to ban the events after they began getting out of hand.

      So... they were actually ok with it until it became dangerous. So much for your cynicism.

      My cynicism, on the other hand, goes much deeper: I'm sure the reason they allowed it in the first place is because anything that gets people into the store boosts sales....

      • but "out of hand" might mean having too much fun for autistic prudes who hate to see anyone having a better more enjoyable life than their pathetic one.

        of course it was done for publicity and sales, so what? that's how it's done

    • ... or perhaps, act like an adult.
      • In this world, acting like an adult means dropping everything and spending all of one's effort on combating climate change.

        I see precious few adults in the world.

        Given that almost all of us are acting like children already, waiting around for someone more responsible to solve our problems, what difference does hide and seek make?

        If the plan was to disrupt business somewhere important like a supermarket or an unemployment office, that would be childish. But Ikea is just selling disposable shit that leads mor

  • Attn: John Carmack (Score:4, Interesting)

    by theodp ( 442580 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @04:18AM (#59168356)

    IKEA Hide-N-Seek, Oculus Edition?

  • "People are stopping everyone who 'looks like they are here for a game of hide and seek'" I am intrigued to find out how one looks like to get preemptively caught playing hide and seek?
  • They initially allowed hide-and-seek events. 'nuf said
  • "People are stopping everyone who 'looks like they are here for a game of hide and seek,'"

    I'm curious, how do those people look like? 3 feet high and 7 years old?

  • Even if it it does involve those little sample rooms Ikea puts together.

    I could see maybe 300 people and 300,000 sq ft, or even less.

  • I thought they were an escape room company! Or why is it so hard to find the exit?

  • I think I might have a better venue to propose: a forest inside a stadium [msn.com]. While it is an art piece, hide and seek shouldn't do it any harm.

  • People showing up claiming to play hide and seek but interested in causing trouble?

    So they just ban the event entirely?

    Or is there something else going on?

    While Ikea is certainly free to have whatever policies it wants regarding the use of its property, the decision to outright ban the entire practice instead of kicking people out of the store who are causing trouble seems to tread dangerously close to infringing on the right to peaceably assemble.

    I'm not excusing the troublemakers here, but I expec

    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      who are causing trouble seems to tread dangerously close to infringing on the right to peaceably assemble.

      Wrong; Not even CLOSE to infringing on the right. The property owner of an IKEA store does not have to allow ANY assembly of people whether peaceful, or otherwise.

      The only place where you can have an assembly without permission is on your own property.
      You can also have assemblies on certain government-owned or "public" property designated for assemblies;
      However, in general, a permit will be requir

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        I only meant to draw the comparison to a right to peaceably assemble in theory... Obviously the property owner has every right to decide who may stay on their property, and to exclude people for any reason that they see fit.

        My main point was that I can kind of understand the mindset behind wanting to use a place like Ikea for an activity like this... while I can completely appreciate that a retail outlet not really the proper place for that kind of activity, I can't really think of any other place that

        • I only meant to draw the comparison to a right to peaceably assemble in theory...

          No it's silly. Just because people can assemble peacefully doesn't mean it's safe to do so. Honestly 3000 additional customers in an IKEA store is just a liability lawsuit waiting to happen when someone gets injured. God forbid the place catches fire, it's hard enough to find your way out of IKEA as it is.

  • The police did not shut the game down on their own volition.. IKEA choose to not allow the game on their property and leveraged
    their own security teams WITH ASSISTANCE from the Police.

    Property owners have the right to do that. Police did not shutdown the game: they were there to enforce the law and assist IKEA in preventing trespass against them by FB users attempting to have the event despite IKEA Not Agreeing or permitting the Event AND also IKEA having Policies against the activity.

  • by Gabest ( 852807 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @12:35PM (#59169054)
    I can't even find myself in IKEA.
  • Ned, who crawled out of a Birkifjord entertainment console, 5 days after the event, 203 miles from the IKEA store, as a family of 5 was watching The Great Britain Bake Show. All the talk of Figgy Pudding was too much for the contestant, having not eaten since he ran out of kippers 3 days before.

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