USA TODAY International Edition

World got ya seething? Enter the rage room

Patrons unleash fury in sanctuarie­s of smash

- Marina Pitofsky

Have you ever wanted to smash something after a long day at work?

There’s a more grown-up way to throw a tantrum.

Rage rooms, also known as smash rooms or anger rooms, have opened in cities around the world, offering a safe place for people to shatter away their anger – literally. You can hurl a plate across a room, take a sledgehamm­er to an old computer or kiss a framed photo of your ex goodbye with a golf club.

The first rage room opened in Japan in 2008, according to Vice. Since then, rage rooms have spread to countries from Serbia to the United Kingdom to Argentina. There are hundreds of rage rooms in the USA, and new ones have popped up in cities such as Charlotte, North Carolina, and Tuscon, Arizona, in the past year. In October, rage rooms opened in Milwaukee; Rochester, New York; Hampton, Virginia; and American Fork, Utah.

Rage rooms are generally affordable, but like anything else, prices vary. In Glen Burnie, Maryland, you can pay as little as $15 for a BYOB package – that’s bring your own breakable. In New York City, the $95 “Couples Therapy” package comes with two electronic items, such as a printer or laptop, and two buckets of ceramic plates, mugs and bowls. In Los Angeles, you can pay up to $300 for the “Overkill” package, which includes 100 items such as television­s, wine bottles and printers.

Maxwell Luthy, director of trends and insights at Trend Watching, said rage rooms allow consumers to make a memory instead of buying a product. The U.S. consumer base is increasing­ly stressed, according to Luthy, from the headaches of daily life, as well as issues such as climate change and politics.

“So you have an anxious consumer who needs to let off some steam, and this provides an experience for them,” Luthy said. “This is more substantia­l than a Unicorn Frappuccin­o.”

Rage rooms are not just for when you’re seeing red, according to Mary Babic, a co-owner of the Smash Room in Daytona Beach, Florida. She said customers flock to the smash room as a form of stress relief, not anger management. “When we talk about, it, we literally just talk about relieving that pressure you didn’t even know was there,” Babic said. “We actually talk about the fun of it.”

Vantroy Greene, who opened the House of Purge in Charlotte, North Carolina, in May, said the need to relax unifies his clients.

“I feel like there’s a lot of people who need an outlet from family stress or just the stress of life,” Greene said.

Kaki King, a guitarist from New York City, visited Rage Industries in Seattle in October, while she was on tour. She said she was surprised that she enjoyed the experience, even though she does not think of herself as violent. “I was the most surprised by the fact that someone like me – I consider myself calm, peaceful, measured, not quick to anger at all – (would) actually be expressing anger physically, even against these inanimate objects,” she said.

Some mental health profession­als doubt that rage rooms are an effective way of expressing anger.

Scott Bea, a clinical psychologi­st at the Cleveland Clinic, said rage rooms can be fun, but they should not substitute communicat­ion or seeking help.

“You have an anxious consumer who needs to let off some steam, and this provides an experience for them. This is more substantia­l than a Unicorn Frappuccin­o.”

Maxwell Luthy Trend Watching

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States