How this business is helping Canadians cure their COVID rage, one swing at a time
In a year of periodic lockdowns and pent-up frustrations, the Vengeance Van has taken off as a novelty recreation service amid the COVID-19 pandemic, offering a high-energy outlet for letting off a little destructive steam.
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OTTAWA - On a quiet crescent in suburban Ottawa, Grace Roswell is seeing red.Crowbar in hand, Grace is celebrating her 12th birthday inside the crimson-.
You might need a sledgehammer, offers Bren Walker, Vengeance Van’s owner. One triumphant swing and the winged seraph falls, decapitated. Grace allows herself a sheepish smile, her home-school stresses already flitting away. In a year of periodic lockdowns and pent-up frustrations, the Vengeance Van has taken off as a novelty recreation service amid the COVID-19 pandemic, offering a high-energy outlet for letting off a little destructive steam. Walker, 33, founded the mobile rage cage after his seven-year-old business hosting black-lit Nerf battles for kids and corporate teams shut down amid lockdown restrictions and physical distancing requirements. It s closed for the foreseeable future.
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