Credits

This page gives a little shout-out to other people, tools, and companies that have aided in creating some of our content. Thank you for your valuable expertise. Thanks to:

  • The Terms and Conditions page was created with the help of Termly’s Terms and Conditions Generator.
  • The Privacy Policy page was created with the help of Automattic’s Privacy Policy under their Creative Commons Sharealike License
  • Pixabay and Unsplash for their stunning free images & royalty free stock
  • Snazzy maps for their fantastic map styles
  • Coffee vector created by freepik – www.freepik.com
  • Font awesome icons under the (CC BY 4.0) license
  • 6th March 2012 – Dick Turpin’s grave by Rach, licensed under CC BY 2.0
  • This image (part of a clue for the Lincoln Murder Mystery Trail) was generated in part using OpenAI’s Dall-E image generation software. The generated image has been edited in Photoshop to change the surroundings.
  • This image (part of a clue for the St. Ives Murder Mystery Trail) was generated in part using OpenAI’s Dall-E image generation software (the portrait on the wall). The generated image has been combined in Photoshop with another image to change its surroundings.
  • A small part of this image (featured image on the Oxford Murder Mystery Trail page) was generated using OpenAI‘s Dall-E image generation software (the face inside the moon). The generated image has been combined in Photoshop with other artwork.
  • The Bristol Old City Murder Mystery Trail’s Inventory page uses images of three coins, each featuring a parrot, a monkey, and an elephant, respectively. These images were generated using OpenAI’s Dall-E image generation software and have been worked into the surrounding composition.
  • The City of London Murder Mystery Trail uses a small picture of a bottle in the final clue, a small picture of a trunk in the Breaking Clues, and a picture of an open trunk in the inventory. These images were generated using Adobe Firefly’s text-to-image generator. All images were further developed in Photoshop, e.g. to add masks, separate out and work into shadows, and add the clue card to the trunk image.
  • Picture of King’s College, Cambridge. Photo by Chris Boland – www.chrisboland.com

Thanks to all of the above people, tools and companies for the value you add!

If you believe we’ve utilised an asset of yours and you’d like a mention on this page, get in touch!