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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.
An amateur computer video game that re-creates the shooting, V-Tech Rampage, also sparked outrage. [182] The creator, Ryan Lambourn, a resident of Sydney, Australia, who grew up in the U.S., [182] posted a message on his website stating that he would remove the game in exchange for payment, but later posted that the statement was a joke. [183]
Download QR code; Print/export ... Articles related to the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007. ... V. V-Tech Rampage; Virginia Tech
We had two, three, four, maybe even as high as six." The initial autopsy of the Virginia Tech gunman found no gross brain function abnormalities that could explain the rampage that left 33 people dead. [75] June 12, 2007. Cho's family allows the release of Cho's records to the Virginia Tech Incident Review Panel. August 30, 2007
Download QR code; Print/export ... Pages in category "Video games set in 2007" ... V. V-Tech Rampage; Y. Yakuza 3 This page was ...
Science & Tech. Sports. Weather. ... Vance posted an infamous clip of a Miss Teen USA contestant struggling to answer a question in 2007. ... attaching a video of then-18-year-old Caitlin Upton ...
Cho Seung-hui [a] (Korean: 조승희; January 18, 1984 – April 16, 2007), anglicized as Seung-Hui Cho, was a South Korean mass murderer who was responsible for the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007. Cho killed 32 people and wounded 17 others with two semi-automatic pistols on April 16, 2007, at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia .
Vanderbilt staved off a Virginia Tech comeback to start the season with an upset win. The Commodores came out on top in the first overtime of the college football season to defeat the Hokies 34-27 .