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Parenting Should kids be playing with toy guns? In a society scarred by shootings, the answer is more complicated for parents than for children.
Twisted Tower's lead developer speaks to Game Rant about how his team used old toy guns as a source of inspiration for the game's weapons.
Air guns — an umbrella term which includes BB and pellet guns in both rifle and handgun forms — often are marketed as toys, but they’ve become more dangerous as weapons technology has evolved.
While some parents feel kids shouldn't be playing with toy guns, others don't have a problem with it. But what do experts say?
My son is a freshman in high school and has recently become obsessed with Nerf and airsoft guns. He wants to upgrade his arsenal with a new “rifle” for $250. I’m a pacifist and am horrified ...
Tamir was playing with a toy gun when Cleveland police responding to a call pulled up and within seconds, shot him. When his 14-old-sister ran to the scene, she was pushed to the ground and ...
The annual Toy Gun Exchange in collaboration with Back to Basics outreach ministry and Buffalo F.A.T.H.E.R.S. was put together for kids to trade in their toy guns for a nonviolent toy.
Nor would I confess that this little Jewish girl was once a rootin-tootin gun-totin’ tot with a fascination with firearms. And sometimes they weren’t even toy guns.
The suspect shot by police after an armed robbery of a Covington bank last month pointed a toy gun disguised in black tape at officers.
It’s a debate popping up in some parenting blogs: should parents allow their kids to play with toy guns given the gun violence we often hear and see?
Air guns — an umbrella term which includes BB and pellet guns in both rifle and handgun forms — often are marketed as toys, but they’ve become more dangerous as weapons technology has evolved.