Rape Day Official

“Awareness campaigns saved my life. Not because they fixed me, but because they believed me before I believed myself. They gave me a map when I didn’t even know I was lost.”

💡 A 2019 video game with the same name was also a subject of controversy and was eventually banned from the Steam store before release.

In early 2019, a game titled Rape Day was slated for release on the popular gaming platform Steam. Developed by an independent creator, the game was described as a "visual novel" where players controlled a serial killer who committed acts of sexual violence against women during a zombie apocalypse. Rape Day

I can help write that, provided the framing condemns sexual violence and avoids giving a platform to harmful material. Please confirm if that’s what you’re looking for, and I’ll draft a long-form article accordingly.

That was the crack. Not a shout—a whisper. “Awareness campaigns saved my life

She survived by shrinking.

Use resources like the Advocacy Center of Tompkins County to learn how to talk to teens about these viral threats. In early 2019, a game titled Rape Day

For seven years, Maya Kincaid’s voice lived in a locked drawer. She was a graphic designer in Portland, Oregon—someone who built visual stories for other people but could never narrate her own. The trauma began on a routine Tuesday night. A man she’d met twice for coffee, charming and patient, followed her home. By the time the streetlights flickered on, her world had fractured.

The origins of "Rape Day" are unclear, but it is believed to have started on online forums and social media groups, where individuals with extremist views and a lack of empathy congregate. These groups often promote hate speech, misogyny, and violence against women. The trend gained traction when some individuals began using the hashtag to claim that rape was a "fun" or "exciting" experience, sparking widespread outrage and condemnation.