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VRAS. Virtual Reality Adventure Studios
"IMMERSE YOURSELF IN THE ADVENTURE
...IT CAN BE A NIGHTMARE OR A DREAM."
This game is so hard it took me 297 attempts just to verify that it's even possible! (not that I've had any parkour experience outside of my own games)
use Alt+F4 to quit game because I am LAZY
Parkour
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"Parcours" redirects here. For the term used in cycle racing, see Glossary of cycling § P.
Parkour
Julien Do parkour in park.jpg
Julien Vigroux performing parkour in a park
Also known as PK[1][2][3]
Focus Obstacle passing
Country of origin France
Creator David Belle
Ancestor arts Asian martial arts, athletics, gymnastics, obstacle courses
Descendant arts Freerunning
Olympic sport No
Parkour (French: [paʁkuʁ]) is a training discipline where practitioners (called traceurs) aim to get from one point to another in a complex environment, without assisting equipment and in the fastest and most efficient way possible. With roots in military obstacle course training and martial arts, parkour includes running, climbing, swinging, vaulting, jumping, plyometrics, rolling, and quadrupedal movement—whatever is suitable for the situation.[4][5]
Parkour is an activity that can be practiced alone or with others, and is usually carried out in urban spaces, though it can be done anywhere.[6][7] It involves seeing one's environment in a new way, and envisioning the potential for navigating it by movement around, across, through, over and under its features.[8][9]
Parkour as a type of movement was established by David Belle in France in 1988,[10][11] however the practice of similar movements in communities around the world brings into question the relevance of such an attribution.[12] The discipline was popularised in the late 1990s and 2000s through films, documentaries, video games, and advertisements.[12][13][14]
Derivative terminologies and disciplines
In September 2003, Mike Christie's documentary Jump London, starring Sébastien Foucan, was released. In the documentary, the term "freerunning" was used as an attempt to translate "parkour", in order to make it more appealing to the English-speaking audience.[138] Foucan decided to keep using the term "freerunning" to describe his discipline, to distinguish it from David Belle's methods.[139][140]
The remaining seven Yamakasi members continued to use the term "l'art du déplacement", also not wanting to associate it too closely with parkour. Similar to Sébastien's freerunning, l'art du déplacement is less about the hard discipline of the original Yamakasi group; rather, it takes a participatory approach focused on making the teaching more accessible. David Belle kept the term "parkour", saying the group contributed to the development of it, but that his father was the source of his motivation and had verbally communicated this method only to him.[140]
Both parkour and freerunning encompass the ideas of overcoming obstacles and self-expression; in freerunning, the greater emphasis is on self-expression.[139] Although the differences between the disciplines are often hard to discern, practitioners tend to aspire to parkour and describe themselves as traceurs rather than as freerunners.[141]
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