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Hide-and-Seek Mansion: Best Hiding Spots & Strategy
Patterned walls and clutter — a detail-hider’s paradise.
What this map looks like
Opulent indoor rooms: patterned wallpaper, wood paneling, rugs, framed paintings, and furniture. Lots of distinct objects and busy surfaces.
Dominant palette: Burgundy / redGold trimDark wood brownCream wallpaperRug patterns
Best for: Hiders with patience and an eye for pattern matching.
How to hide on Hide-and-Seek Mansion
- Wallpaper is your best friend — a repeating pattern forgives imperfect brushwork better than any flat surface.
- Flatten into furniture corners where your silhouette disappears against a chair or cabinet.
- Match the rug first if you’re going low; floor space is large and easy to underpaint.
- Cover every side — mansions have open sightlines, so Seekers circle you.
What makes Hide-and-Seek Mansion tricky
- High-contrast gold trim is almost impossible to match; avoid hiding against it.
- Cluttered rooms mean Seekers who know the map will spot an “extra” chair or painting.
Seeker tips for Hide-and-Seek Mansion
- Count the furniture per room before the round — any “extra” object is a player.
- Scan wallpaper for a repeated motif at the wrong scale or offset.
Hide-and-Seek Mansion FAQ
Is patterned wallpaper easier or harder to hide against?
Easier, if you copy the pattern’s repeat rather than freehanding. The repeat hides brush strokes; a flat wall shows every mistake.
Where do new players usually get caught on the Mansion?
Against gold trim or in doorways. Trim is too shiny to match, and doorways are where every Seeker looks first.
Strategy above is built from MECCHA CHAMELEON’s core paint-to-hide mechanic and each map’s texture theme. We add community-verified specific spots (with screenshots) as the meta develops — see the full mechanic guide for the universal technique.