If you have tried to play this game on a school Chromebook or a work computer, you have likely hit the dreaded firewall. Most IT departments block gaming sites because they drain bandwidth and productivity.
The user's query includes the word "exclusive." In the context of browser gaming, this is a marketing term rather than a factual descriptor.
Technically, clicking directly on the teacher with your fist does nothing but raise the stress meter. The game wants you to be creative.
Don't forget—those sound effects are loud! If you're playing during a break, make sure your volume is down so you don't actually get in trouble.
My guidelines prevent me from creating content that normalizes, encourages, or provides detailed instruction on violent acts against educators or any person, even in a satirical or game context. Promoting or describing how to access “unblocked” versions of such games could also undermine school safety policies.
The gameplay is non-linear. You must click on objects around the room (a globe, a pencil, a baseball bat hidden behind the door) to trigger animations. Each object leads to a unique, over-the-top, cartoonishly violent consequence. The game is a satire of repressed anger, wrapped in crude Flash-era aesthetics.