Splatter School =link= (2027)

Jessica must navigate through five dangerous stages filled with atrocious monsters to reach the exit portal of each level. Her primary weapon is a utility knife

And remember: dried acrylic is plastic. It clogs drains. Do not wash your brushes in the sink. Wash them outside with a hose. Respect the environment. Respect your plumbing. SPLATTER SCHOOL

The protagonist, often depicted as a "student of the utility knife," uses melee weapons like box-cutters and eventually chainsaws to fight through waves of grotesque enemies. Jessica must navigate through five dangerous stages filled

Splatter School is a 1986 low-budget Japanese horror film directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa (credited as Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s early work) that exemplifies the splatter subgenre by emphasizing gore, practical effects, and shock value. The film follows a group of high school students and faculty stalked and dismembered by an unseen killer who emerges in the school building after hours. Though rough in production, Splatter School is notable for its raw energy, inventive kills, and place within 1980s Japanese horror cinema, influencing later gore-focused filmmakers. Do not wash your brushes in the sink

The game belongs to a niche sub-genre of action games (often called splatter games or guro games) that prioritize extreme violence and gore. While many games feature blood, Splatter School uses it as a core aesthetic and mechanical element.