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V-Tech Rampage is a 2007 controversial action game created by Australian amateur video game developer Ryan Lambourn. The game recreates the Virginia Tech shooting , and was released in 12 May 2007 on Newgrounds , less than a month after the shooting occurred.
This is an (incomplete) list of electronic games released by VTech, along with their format and date of release, if known.See lists of video games for related lists. . Starting in the early 1980s, VTech launched a series of portable and table top games that made use of LCD, VFD and LED d
Pages in category "Flash games" The following 188 pages are in this category, out of 188 total. ... V. V-Tech Rampage; VVVVVV; W. Warfare 1917; Webosaurs; Winnie the ...
Developer Ryan Lambourn created a flash game called V-Tech Rampage in 2007, which allows players to control the actions of gunman Seung-Hui Cho in the Virginia Tech massacre. Lambourn professed empathy for Cho, and said that he was a target of bullying in high school. "No one listens to you unless you've got something sensational to do.
V. V-Tech Rampage This page was last edited on 15 December 2024, at 06:36 (UTC). Text ... Category: Video games about school shootings. Add languages ...
The V.Flash Home Edutainment System, also known as V.Smile Pro in Europe, is a seventh-generation educational home video game console and spinoff from the V.Smile series of video game consoles developed by VTech and Koto Laboratory. [1] Unlike the V.Smile, this game console uses 3D graphics. This system is designed for kids aged 6 to 10. [2]
"V-TECH: It's kicking in", reads the sign in front of the school. Yes, he's a /b/tard. That reminds me: on /b/, the CNN or something poll was raided. It was about whether the game should be taken down or not. At the end of the poll, it was about 220 for yes, and 4,735 for no. It was funny
In 1999, Fulp created the game Pico's School in Macromedia Flash 3, before the launch of the scripting language ActionScript that subsequent Flash game developers would use. The game "exhibited a complexity of design and polish in presentation that was virtually unseen in amateur Flash game development" until then and has been credited both ...