With making a maze you will need to be able to use Inventor as well as Fusion 360. With making a maze, I just made a simple square and I extruded it the height of the material that we were using. I then used the rectangle features to make everything look like a path and when after I laid down like 3 or 4 rectangles I would then go back over with all of the rectangles and then trim out the pieces that I didn't need I think that that way is the most time efficient and I think that it's the best way. So after you have that down you just keep on doing it until you have your maze the way you want it. Then you will need and transfer the file to Fusion and then make sure that you know the dimensions of your tool that you are using and make the orientation of your piece right dead smack in the middle and then when you are ready to move to the router. You will want to transfer the G-code to your flash drive and then plug it into the computer and line up the router with the middle of you piece that your designing on. You could draw an X across the piece of surface.
I learned that I can do a very good job and that I can do everything at a high efficiently. I also learned that I really don't like doing anything with fusion and that I'm standing far away from that software for my final project. It's just super tedious and I just don't like doing a lot of tedious work. The whole software is just one more step to work on things while I could be doing other things. I get why we need specific soft wares for different machines I'm just not the biggest fan of it.