Admission for One, Two, or Four to Ripley's Believe It Or Not Museum and Mirror Maze (Up to $91.96 Value)
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10,000-square-foot emporium of oddness collects real-life wonders & features 100-mirror maze to provide strange delight for all ages
Science can be a strange or frightening word, particularly when it's listed under "cause of death" and followed by three exclamation points. Overcome your fear of weird knowledge with today's Groupon for admission to Ripley’s Believe It Or Not Museum and their [Mirror Maze] ](http://www.ripleys.com/sanfrancisco/your-visit/marvelous-mirror-maze/) Choose from the following options (Please note that values are based on adult ticket prices; children’s tickets are $14.99):
- $11.50 for one combo ticket (a $22.99 value)
- $21.00 for two combo tickets (a $45.98 value)
- $38.50 for four combo tickets (a $91.96 value)
Ripley’s 10,000-square-foot Odditorium entices families to Fisherman’s Wharf with rarity-racked galleries and interactive exhibits based on the work of Robert Ripley. Self-guide a tour through their collections of curiosities, playing tailor to a shrunken torso, arm wrestling the world’s largest sea lion, and ineffectively icing your arm with a Mona Lisa made of Rubik’s cubes. Historical artifacts such as Buck Helm’s car from the 1989 San Francisco earthquake shed peculiar light on local history, and statues of Michael Jackson and Lady Gaga constructed from candy pay tribute to Americana at large.
Like a good book, a maze is an excellent way to lose oneself or explore the mental turmoil of a panicked lab rat. Today’s Groupon offers mouse-method acting opportunities through Ripley’s Mirror Maze, a 2,000-square-foot collection of reflective passageways that offers challenging conundrums for explorers of all ages. Lights and sounds gently shock the senses of patrons prospecting through the maze’s collection of more than 100 mirrors, dead ends, continuous circles, and looking-glass passageways to Wonderland.
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About Ripley's Believe It or Not San Francisco
Ripley’s 10,000-square-foot Odditorium entices families to Fisherman’s Wharf with rarity-racked galleries and interactive exhibits based on the work of Robert Ripley. Self-guide a tour through their collections of curiosities, playing tailor to a shrunken torso, arm wrestling the world’s largest sea lion, and ineffectively icing your arm with a Mona Lisa made of Rubik’s cubes. Historical artifacts such as Buck Helm’s car from the 1989 San Francisco earthquake shed peculiar light on local history, and statues of Michael Jackson and Lady Gaga constructed from candy pay tribute to Americana at large.