Gourmetmarathon


Culinary Food Tour x Fortnite
The ultimate and delicious Team Challenge

Our Happy Clients

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as Corporate Teamevent

The Gourmetmarathon is
a unique culinary city rally for corporate teams.

Equipped with our interactive app,
your group will explore the city, solve challenges, collect points
– and end the day with a 3-course dinner
at a handpicked restaurant.

It’s team building with taste.

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Mehr Informationen

1. run & fun

2. fine dine

On you marks! Get Set! Go!!!

Tailored to your wishes

Hunt & Gather

Mind, body & belly

Three courses of pure joy

386
1-2503-5h

Berlin

Tauchen Sie ein in eine kulinarische Reise durch das lebendige Herz Berlins. Der Genussmarathon Berlin lädt Sie ein, die Stadt auf eine einzigartige …

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418
1-2503-5h

Hamburg

Ihrer Eintrittskarte zu einer kulinarischen Entdeckungsreise im Herzen der Hauptstadt. Nehmen Sie an unserem Teamevent teil und begeben Sie sich auf e…

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450
1-2503-5h

München

Ihrer Eintrittskarte zu einer kulinarischen Entdeckungsreise im Herzen der bayerischen Hauptstadt. Treten Sie in unser Teamevent ein und tauchen Sie e…

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433
1-2503-5h

Köln

Ihrer ultimativen Eintrittskarte zu einer kulinarischen Entdeckungsreise im Herzen der Rheinmetropole. Wenn Sie sich auf ein außergewöhnliches Teame…

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409
1-2503-5h

Frankfurt am Main

Herzlich willkommen beim Genussmarathon Frankfurt am Main! Wir heißen Sie herzlich willkommen zu einer außergewöhnlichen kulinarischen Ent…

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472
1-2503-5h

Stuttgart

Ihre Eintrittskarte zu einer kulinarischen Entdeckungsreise im Herzen einer wunderschönen Stadt. Tauchen Sie ein in unser Teamevent und begeben Sie s…

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401
1-2503-5h

Düsseldorf

Ihre Eintrittskarte zu einer kulinarischen Entdeckungsreise im Herzen einer atemberaubenden Stadt. Mit unserem Teamevent begeben Sie sich auf eine unv…

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Flexible and fun – for any occasion

Simple & secure booking

Request your preferred date and receive your info package – no strings attached.

Available almost anywhere

The world is your playground. We’ll tailor the experience to your location.

Super-Fast
availability check


We’ll get back to you quickly with available dates.

Versatile explorer editions

Many missions and themes to choose from – and fully customizable on request.

Easy Payments via Secure Solutions

At any location.
For every corporate event.

Games

Cities

Missions

Players

„Das war eine echt abgefahrene Rallye! Es gab so viele Highlights… unser herausragender, freundlicher, geduldiger Moderator Daniel!! Ein absoluter Schatz. Er war so gut organisiert und einfühlsam!“

Anastasia H.

„Unsere kulinarische Stadtführung in Essen war für 19 Personen als Rahmenprogramm einer Tagung. Ein Genuss für alle Sinne! Spaß an der frischen Luft, danach ein exzellentes Menu aus Interpretationen lokaler Spezialitäten. Nur zu empfehlen!“

Anne
Lean DB

„Fantastische Erfahrung! Das Team war sehr unterhalten und unser Moderator äußerst charmant und freundlich. Dank seiner Anleitung wurde der Genussmarathon in Bad Homburg zu einem unvergesslichen Erlebnis für das gesamte Team.“

Sören B.
Finance

„Die Rallye durch München war eine Mordsgaudi. Der Abend im Wirtshaus auch 😉“

Oliver M.
VP Sales

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    30 Answers to the most frequently asked questions regarding our corporate team event:

    1. What is the Genussmarathon, and how is it different from a culinary food tour? Genussmarathon is a culinary food tour with a game-layer—think “city discovery + team play + restaurant finale.” A classic culinary food tour usually means guided walking plus multiple tasting stops. Genussmarathon flips that: the main experience is an interactive city rally (teams solve challenges, complete photo missions, and collect points), and then everyone meets for a shared restaurant finale. That “single finale” is a big difference: it keeps the event smooth for groups, avoids constant regrouping, and makes planning easier for company organizers. You still get the culinary part—just structured as a satisfying ending rather than scattered micro-stops. If you want the “what’s included” view, the best matching subpages are typically “Culinary Food Tour”, “How it works”, and “Restaurant Finale” (often listed under the Experience or Format section).
    2. Is Genussmarathon an outdoor escape game or a city rally? It’s best described as an outdoor escape game-style city rally. Like an outdoor escape game, you’ll get puzzles, clue logic, and teamwork moments—without being locked in a room. Like a city rally, you move through the city, hit curated points, and complete missions at your own pace. The key is the team-based game loop: you’re not just walking; you’re collaborating, deciding, and solving. For corporate groups, that blend matters: escape-game mechanics drive engagement, and the rally structure keeps it flexible and scalable for 6 to 60+ participants. If you’re comparing formats internally, check the subpages usually titled “Outdoor Escape Game” and “City Rally / Team Event Format”—they explain the mechanics, challenge types, and what makes it “adult-friendly” rather than childlike.
    3. How does a Genussmarathon team event work from start to finish? A typical Genussmarathon team event runs in three phases. (1) Kick-off: your group meets at a convenient start point (often near a hotel, office, or central landmark). Teams are formed, roles can be assigned (navigator, photographer, puzzle lead), and the rules are explained in 5–10 minutes. (2) Outdoor escape game / rally phase: teams move through the city, solving challenges and completing photo tasks. The pace is flexible, and the experience is designed to be inclusive—different strengths matter (logic, observation, communication). (3) Restaurant finale: everyone reunites for a shared meal. This is where stories get told, photos get shared, and the event becomes a “real memory,” not just an activity. For a detailed organizer view, the most relevant subpages are usually “Team Event Process”, “Schedule / Duration Options”, and “Restaurant Finale.”
    4. Why is Genussmarathon considered strong team building for companies? Because it triggers team building outcomes without feeling like a workshop. The game structure creates quick “micro-wins” that bond people: solving a clue together, choosing a strategy, laughing at a photo mission, or realizing a quiet teammate is brilliant at navigation. That’s real collaboration—communication, decision-making, role switching—happening naturally. It also breaks office silos: teams are mixed on purpose, so people talk beyond their usual bubble. Then the restaurant finale locks in the effect: conversation becomes easy because everyone shares a storyline from the rally. Unlike many team building formats, it’s inclusive (not overly sporty, not awkward), scalable, and predictable for organizers. If you’re explaining it to HR, point them to subpages like “Team Building Benefits”, “Why it works”, and “Corporate Use Cases.”
    5. How long does the outdoor escape game part of the culinary food tour usually last? Most groups choose 75–120 minutes for the outdoor escape game/rally phase. That range is long enough to get into a flow state (teams stop “warming up” and start truly collaborating), but not so long that people get tired. For after-work team events, a shorter 45–60 minute version works well—especially if your priority is the dinner and networking. For offsites, you can extend to 120+ minutes if you want a bigger game arc, more missions, or a more competitive mode. The right length depends on group size, schedule, and how you want the evening to feel: “quick energy boost” vs “full experience.” The subpages that typically help organizers decide are “Duration & Packages” and “Planning Guide.”
    6. What’s included in the culinary food tour experience (game + restaurant finale)? A standard Genussmarathon culinary food tour includes: the game experience (outdoor escape game-style rally), team setup and rules, curated mission flow, and a restaurant finale where the group ends together. Many editions include light personalization (welcome text, team names) and an event structure that makes coordination easy. Optional add-ons can include deeper branding, special effects or game modifiers, a short award moment, and tailored content depending on the city and your audience (HR vs sales vs leadership). On the food side, the key promise is one shared finale rather than constant tasting stops—simpler logistics, smoother group cohesion. Details vary by package and city, so the best subpages to reference are typically “What’s included”, “Packages / Editions”, and “Restaurant Finale.”
    7. Can we book Genussmarathon as a corporate team event for small teams? Yes. Genussmarathon works well for small corporate teams—especially from 6 people upward—because the format is built around collaboration rather than crowd energy. Small teams often get an even stronger effect: faster bonding, less waiting, and more shared decision-making. You can run it as one team or split into two smaller teams for friendly competition. The restaurant finale also feels more intimate, which is ideal for leadership teams, project squads, or onboarding groups. For very small groups, the best approach is usually a shorter game duration (45–75 minutes) and a strong finale. That keeps the evening light, social, and “premium” rather than overly structured. For booking options, organizers typically check the “Group Size” and “Corporate Packages” subpages, plus the “After-Work Team Event” section if you want it compact.
    8. What is the minimum and maximum group size for this team building activity? A practical minimum is typically 6 participants, because you want enough people for real team dynamics (roles, ideas, momentum). Many corporate bookings sit in the 10–50 range, which is a sweet spot for splitting into balanced teams while keeping the group manageable. Larger groups (60+) are also possible with the right structure: more teams, clear start logic, and a well-planned restaurant finale. The main limit usually isn’t the game—it’s the finale logistics (restaurant capacity, time window, and whether you want a private area). For very large groups, the experience can be staggered or run in parallel, depending on your city and schedule. If you’re deciding internally, point people to subpages like “Group Sizes & Scaling” and “Large Team Events”, which explain team splitting, timing, and what makes big events feel smooth instead of chaotic.
    9. Is the outdoor escape game suitable for mixed fitness levels and ages? Yes. The rally is designed to be movement-based, not sport-based. Teams walk at a comfortable pace, and the experience rewards collaboration more than speed. That makes it suitable for mixed fitness levels, mixed ages, and mixed comfort with “games.” The challenge types vary (observation, logic, communication, photo tasks), so people contribute in different ways—someone can lead navigation while others solve clues or handle the photo missions. For corporate settings, this inclusivity is a major strength: nobody feels left behind, and nobody needs athletic confidence to enjoy it. The best practice is choosing an appropriate duration and ensuring your group has reasonable footwear and weather-appropriate clothing. Organizers who need reassurance usually check “Accessibility & Pace” and “FAQ: Fitness level” subpages.
    10. Do we need any escape room or puzzle experience for the outdoor escape game? No experience needed. The puzzles are designed to be engaging but approachable, because the goal is team flow, not puzzle elitism. You’ll see a range: quick logic moments, observation challenges, light trivia-style prompts, and creative tasks. The best teams are not “the smartest,” but the ones that communicate and distribute roles well. If your group includes puzzle lovers, they’ll enjoy the solving moments. If your group includes puzzle skeptics, they’ll still enjoy the photo missions, exploration, and teamwork—because the design avoids the two common failure modes: overly hard riddles and awkward performative tasks. If you want to set expectations, reference the subpages typically called “Challenge Types” and “Outdoor Escape Game: Difficulty & Style.”
    11. Is the culinary food tour guided, or do teams play independently? Teams typically play independently—that’s part of what makes it scalable and flexible for corporate groups. Instead of a guide managing everyone’s pace, the experience is structured so teams can move smoothly, make decisions, and stay in their own rhythm. That reduces waiting time and prevents the “group herd” problem common in guided tours. That said, the event still has structure: there’s a clear kick-off, clear timing, and a defined finale. Some companies choose an enhanced package that includes additional facilitation, but the standard format is designed to run reliably without needing constant on-site staff. For corporate planners, the most relevant subpages are usually “How it works” and “Self-guided experience”, plus a “Support & Smooth Run” section explaining what happens if questions come up during the game.
    12. How competitive is the team event—do teams compete against each other? It can be either collaborative or lightly competitive, depending on what suits your group. Many companies love friendly competition because it adds energy and creates shared jokes—but it should never feel like pressure. Points and leaderboards can exist as a playful layer, while the real objective remains team bonding and city experience. For mixed groups or leadership-heavy audiences, a “soft competition” mode works best: teams collect points, but the emphasis is on fun, photos, and shared highlights. For sales teams or highly energetic groups, a stronger competition mode can be motivating. If you’re choosing a style, the best subpages to reference are usually “Game Modes”, “Team vs Team”, and “Awards / Wrap-up Options.”
    13. What types of challenges are included (puzzles, photo tasks, trivia) in the outdoor escape game? Expect a varied mix designed for team engagement: puzzles (light logic and pattern thinking), observation tasks (spot details, decode clues from the environment), photo challenges (create memorable team shots), and occasional knowledge prompts that don’t require niche expertise. The key is diversity: if you’re not a puzzle person, you’ll still shine in planning, communication, creativity, or humor. Well-designed tasks avoid two traps: they don’t demand obscure facts, and they don’t force embarrassing public performances. Instead, they create “shared moments” that teams naturally talk about later—perfect for team building. If you need to reassure stakeholders, point them to subpages like “Challenge Examples” and “Task Types: Outdoor Escape Game.”
    14. Can we customize the team building content to our company (branding, themes, inside jokes)? Yes—customization is a common corporate request. Options often include branding elements (company logo in the experience, welcome screens/texts), tailored messaging (project milestone, onboarding theme, leadership offsite tone), and sometimes company-specific fun facts or inside jokes—kept tasteful and inclusive. The key is to customize without breaking flow: the game should still feel like a smooth city experience, not like a marketing presentation. Good customization supports the emotional goal (recognition, celebration, connection) and keeps the event “yours” without becoming heavy. For decision-makers, point them to subpages like “Premium / Business Edition”, “Branding Options”, and “Corporate Personalization.” These typically show what can be adapted and what information is needed.
    15. Can the culinary food tour be run in English for international teams? Yes. English versions are common and work especially well because the core experience is action-based and visual: teams move, observe, decide, and solve. Language matters mainly for instructions and puzzle prompts, which can be provided in English (and often additional languages depending on city/edition). For international groups, the best practice is to keep teams mixed but ensure each team has at least one confident English speaker. If you have multiple languages in one group, ask for a multilingual setup so instructions remain smooth. Organizers planning global team events usually check subpages like “Languages”, “International Teams”, and “English Culinary Food Tour.” If you want, I can also provide an English-ready briefing script for the start.
    16. Which cities do you offer the culinary food tour and outdoor escape game in? Genussmarathon is typically available in many cities (and often expanding), because the format is designed to be scalable. City availability depends on operational coverage and restaurant partnerships for the finale. In practice, companies often choose cities where they have offices, offsites, or conference hotels—so the city list matters mainly for logistics and convenience. The cleanest way to communicate this on your website is via a “Cities” page with filters for country/language and a short description per city edition (what vibe, what finale style). For this FAQ, reference the subpage usually titled “Cities / Locations” and, if relevant, “Europe-wide team events” or “Available in your city?” so prospects can check quickly without contacting you first.
    17. Where does the team event start, and how do we choose the route? Start points are typically chosen for convenience: near a central landmark, your office area, or a conference hotel (like a major hotel hub). Many corporate groups prefer a start that’s easy to find and minimizes late-arrival stress. Routes are usually curated so the experience feels “like the city,” not like a tourist checklist. You generally choose the route by choosing the city edition and confirming the timing and finale location. In some packages, you can request route emphasis (more historic, more modern, more scenic, shorter walking distance). For clarity on your site, point to subpages like “Start Points & Logistics” and “Route / City Edition”—these help organizers understand how flexible it is and what’s fixed for quality reasons.
    18. What happens after the outdoor escape game—how does the restaurant finale work? After the rally, all teams converge at the restaurant for a shared finale meal. This is where the event becomes cohesive: teams swap stories, show photos, laugh about the “moments,” and the group feels united. For corporate events, the finale is also the natural place for a short thank-you speech, a recap, or a light awards moment—optional, never forced. Operationally, the finale is planned so arrival is smooth: a time window, reserved seating, and a clear start for the meal. That removes the biggest pain point of many city activities: “and then everyone disappears.” On your website, the relevant subpages are usually “Restaurant Finale” and “Corporate Dinner Options.” They explain what’s included, how dietary requirements are handled, and how the dinner integrates into the team event schedule.
    19. Is the restaurant part mandatory, or can we book only the outdoor escape game? You can usually book either: (a) the full culinary food tour with restaurant finale, or (b) game-only as an outdoor escape game. The difference is the emotional arc. Game-only works well when you already have dinner plans or you’re doing an afternoon activity. The full version is stronger for team building, because the finale locks in bonding and provides a shared ending. For corporate planners, I generally recommend the full format if the goal is connection, culture, or celebration. If the goal is a quick energizer during a conference day, game-only can be perfect. On your site, clarify this on subpages like “Packages / Editions” and “Game-only vs Full Experience.” This reduces booking friction and helps prospects self-select.
    20. Can we choose the restaurant for the culinary food tour finale? Often yes, within a curated network—because quality and smooth service for groups matter. Some companies have a preferred venue or need a specific location near a hotel or office. In those cases, you can typically propose requirements (area, capacity, cuisine preferences, timing), and the finale is matched accordingly. However, the restaurant finale isn’t just “any table.” It needs group reliability: reservation handling, timing, menu flow, and the ability to host a team event comfortably. That’s why partner restaurants are selected carefully. The best subpages to reference are usually “Restaurant Partners”, “Finale Options”, and “Corporate Dinner”. If you want maximum conversion, present it as: “Choose from partner options” rather than “pick any restaurant,” which can create unrealistic expectations.
    21. What dietary requirements can be handled (vegan, vegetarian, allergies)? Most standard dietary needs can be handled well—vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free (where feasible), allergies, and common restrictions—if they’re provided in advance. The key is process: collect dietary info early, send a consolidated list, and confirm with the restaurant finale partner. For corporate events, this is a trust moment: planners want confidence that nobody feels overlooked. A good approach is to offer a simple intake method (checkboxes + free text) and a clear “deadline” for final dietary notes. On your website, add a subpage or section like “Dietary Requirements” or include it under “FAQ / Restaurant Finale.” Keep the messaging realistic: severe allergies require clear communication and may need special handling.
    22. What happens if it rains—does the outdoor escape game still run? Yes, in most cases. The rally is designed to be weather-resilient: walking is manageable, tasks are not dependent on perfect conditions, and teams can adjust pace. The biggest difference is comfort—bring appropriate clothing and umbrellas. For corporate planners, the smarter question is: “Does the day still feel good in rain?” That’s where the restaurant finale helps enormously: even if the rally is a bit wetter, the finale creates a warm, rewarding end. Many companies also choose a slightly shorter rally duration during uncertain weather seasons. On your website, reference “Bad Weather Plan” and “Planning Tips.” If you want to be extra reassuring, state clearly: “We plan with Plan A/Plan B logic,” especially for winter and shoulder seasons.
    23. What is the cancellation policy for a corporate team event booking? Cancellation terms depend on your package and especially on restaurant commitments. Generally, the closer you are to the event date, the more fixed costs exist (restaurant reservations, staffing, preparation). The best practice is to communicate a clear timeline: what happens if you cancel early, what happens if you adjust the headcount, and what is non-refundable (often the restaurant portion). Because policies can vary by country/city/restaurant partner, your site should host a dedicated “Cancellation & Rescheduling” section and link to it from the booking flow. If you want the FAQ to convert well, keep this answer transparent and calm: companies don’t expect “free cancellation anytime,” they expect clarity and fairness. Point readers to your Terms / Cancellation subpage and, if relevant, the Corporate Booking Conditions page.
    24. How far in advance should we book a team building culinary food tour? Earlier is safer, especially for peak seasons (spring and the pre-Christmas period). For small groups, you can sometimes book closer to the date, but restaurant finale availability is the limiting factor. A practical rule: book as soon as you know the date window and approximate headcount, then refine details later. If you’re planning a Christmas party, many companies book well ahead. For offsites in hotels, align with the hotel schedule early so the start and finale fit your day plan. On your website, support conversion by adding a short guideline under “Planning / Booking” such as “ideal lead time,” “busy months,” and “what we need to secure your slot.” This reduces uncertainty and increases inquiry quality.
    25. Do you offer versions for a Christmas party team event or year-end team building? Yes. Year-end and Christmas party editions work especially well because the format provides a warm social arc: quick activation through the rally, then a cozy finale meal where people connect. Many companies want something more memorable than “just dinner,” but less formal than a staged program. This is exactly the sweet spot. You can also add light wrap-up elements—short thank-you speech, “best moment of the year,” small awards—without turning it into a show. If weather is a concern, choose a shorter rally and emphasize the finale. For your site, reference subpages like “Christmas Party Team Event”, “Seasonal Editions”, and “Winter Planning.” These pages should highlight ease of planning, inclusivity, and the “shared ending” that prevents the event from dissolving into separate groups.
    26. Can we schedule this as an after-work team event with a shorter outdoor escape game? Absolutely. After-work is one of the strongest use cases: a 45–60 minute rally energizes people without exhausting them, and the restaurant finale gives a relaxed social finish. This format is ideal for teams that want something better than “drinks only,” but don’t want to block a full day. A good after-work schedule is: meet near a central point, quick briefing, short mission, then dinner. It feels like an evening out—just with more bonding and better stories. On your site, you’ll want an “After-Work Team Event” subpage that outlines a sample timeline, recommended start times, and why the shorter version still delivers team building. This is a high-conversion segment for HR and office managers.
    27. Is Genussmarathon suitable for onboarding and team building for new employees? Yes—onboarding is one of the best fits. New employees often struggle with invisible barriers: they don’t know who’s who, they don’t have shared stories yet, and they don’t want to interrupt established social circles. The rally solves that by mixing teams and creating immediate shared moments. Because tasks require cooperation, people talk naturally. New hires contribute through roles that suit them—navigation, observation, photos—without needing to “perform.” Then the restaurant finale provides space for real conversation, which is where belonging forms. If you run onboarding cohorts, you can also add light company branding or a welcome message. For your site, reference “Onboarding Team Events” and “Team Building Outcomes.” This helps HR see it as a culture tool, not just entertainment.
    28. How do you ensure the team event runs smoothly without onsite staff? Smoothness comes from structure and support, not constant supervision. The experience is designed with a clear start, clear team instructions, and a reliable mission flow. Most issues are prevented by good briefing and simple rules. For anything unexpected, a support channel (often phone/WhatsApp/email) can assist quickly. Additionally, the restaurant finale is pre-planned: reserved seating, timing window, and a known arrival procedure. That removes the common chaos point of many city activities. On your website, show this explicitly on a “How it runs smoothly” or “Support & Reliability” subpage. Corporate buyers care less about flashy promises and more about: “Will this work with my group, on time, without drama?” Clear operational confidence converts.
    29. What do we need to bring (phones, battery, clothing) for the outdoor escape game? Bring: a charged smartphone per team, comfortable shoes, and weather-appropriate clothing. A power bank is smart for longer editions. If your company uses strict phone policies, clarify whether team leaders can use one device while others participate analog (talking, observing, navigating). For rain: umbrella and a jacket. For cold: gloves and layers. For summer: water and sun protection. The event is designed so you don’t need special equipment—no props, no complicated setup. Just a team and a city. On your website, include a short checklist on subpages like “What to bring” and “Outdoor Escape Game Tips.” This reduces last-minute organizer anxiety and improves participant experience on the day.
    30. How do we get a quote for a culinary food tour team event and what information do you need? To get an accurate quote quickly, provide: city, date (or date range), estimated group size, preferred time window, and whether you want game-only or the full culinary food tour with restaurant finale. Helpful extras: language (English/German), occasion (team building, Christmas party, onboarding), dietary needs, and whether you want customization/branding. A good booking flow lets you request a quote in under a minute, then refine details later. The clearer your basics, the faster you’ll get a clean proposal. On your website, route this to subpages like “Request a Quote”, “Packages / Editions”, and “Corporate Team Event Booking.” If you include a short “what we need” checklist right next to the inquiry form, you’ll increase conversion and reduce back-and-forth.

    Culinary Food Tour Team Event: Book Your Genussmarathon Experience

    Ready to turn your next team event into a memorable culinary food tour with an outdoor escape game twist? Book the Genussmarathon for effortless team building—choose your city, pick a date, and we’ll take care of the structure from kickoff to restaurant finale.