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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.
Canabalt sparked the genre of "endless running" games; The New Yorker described Canabalt as "a video game that has sparked an entirely new genre of play for mobile phones." [11] Game designer Scott Rogers credits side-scrolling shooters like Scramble (1981) and Moon Patrol (1982) and chase-style game play in platform games like Disney's Aladdin (1994) and Crash Bandicoot (1996) as early ...
Eventually, this site turned into Newgrounds.com. [9] [10] 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 ...
A sicko from New Jersey allegedly took part in a neo-Nazi child-porn ring whose members groomed children online and extorted them to send self-produced, sexually-explicit videos, federal ...
Wild video captured the moment a brazen trio of masked thieves armed with assault rifles snatched multiple containers of cash from an armored truck outside a Tennessee bank.
Tekiela, a celebrated firefighter paramedic and father of two, confessed that he had led a secret double life as a hitman for the Chicago mob.
The Behemoth is an American video game development company that was founded in 2003 by John Baez, artist Dan Paladin, and programmers Tom Fulp, Brandon LaCava, and Nick Dryburgh.
Newgrounds is an American company and entertainment website founded by Tom Fulp in 1995. The site hosts user-generated content such as games, films, audio, and artwork. [ 1 ] Fulp produces in-house content at the headquarters and offices in Glenside, Pennsylvania.