Splatter School

Splatter School is a 2D action platformer and adult horror game where players control a high school student, typically Jessica, who must fight her way out of a monster-infested school. Game Overview

The Premise: Jessica finds herself trapped in her school, which has been overrun by lethal monsters.

Gameplay Mechanics: The game follows a classic action-platformer style where you move through stages, jump between platforms, and engage in combat.

Combat and Equipment: Players use various weapons to defeat enemies, including a utility knife and a chainsaw. SPLATTER SCHOOL

Mature Content: It is categorized as an R18+ adult game due to "lewd" action elements and graphic horror themes. Key Features

Progression: The game features multiple stages and distinctive bosses that must be defeated to reach the ending.

Art Style: It uses a stylized anime aesthetic, which has inspired various fan re-draws and community art. Splatter School is a 2D action platformer and


Introduction

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.

Part IV: Splatter School vs. Traditional Art Education

Traditional art schools teach you how to draw a perfect sphere. They teach perspective, chiaroscuro, and anatomy. These are valuable skills. However, they can also be paralyzing.

The Splatter School is not a replacement for traditional education; it is a supplement. It is the warm-up act. It is the "free writing" exercise of the visual arts. Introduction Splatter School is a 1986 low-budget Japanese

| Feature | Traditional Atelier | Splatter School | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Primary Tool | Pencil & Sable Brush | Squeeze bottle & Stick | | Mental State | Focused, analytical | Flow-state, cathartic | | Fear of Failure | High (ruining a drawing) | Low (there is no wrong way) | | Clean Up Time | 5 minutes | 45 minutes | | Result | Recognizable image | Raw emotion / Texture |

Many fine artists are now fusing the two. They will paint a realistic portrait of a face using a brush, and then splatter the background. The contrast between the controlled face and the violent background is often more powerful than either element alone.


The String Dip

Cut a piece of yarn or thick string, dip it in paint, lay it in a zigzag across the canvas, and then pull the string toward you while pressing down. The result is a fractal, organic explosion. It looks like neurons firing or lightning striking.