Bomb disposal toy for SIX-YEAR-OLDS called Cut the Wire is pulled from shops across America after outrage from parents
In the game, players from as young as six compete to see who will cut the right wire to defuse the device and 'save the day'
A BOMB disposal toy for children as young as SIX has been pulled from stores across the US after outrage from parents.
The toy is a "fun game of luck" according to its Hong Kong makers but sales have been halted after parents felt Cut The Wire went too far.
In the game, players compete to see who will cut the right wire to defuse the device and "save the day".
The toy is one of many espionage toys from Yulu, who also released a Russian Roulette-style game which sees players press a plastic watermelon to their heads, hoping that it won't break and soak them with water.
After outrage from parents, sales of the bomb disposal toy have been halted at Walmart and Target, and the toy has been pulled from Amazon in the US.
On Twitter, one parent said: "How about 'Duck and Cover: The Biological Attack Version' next?"
The toy didn't just cause controversy with parents while on sale in the US - a Sheriff's deputy in Florida resigned after he sent the game through internal mail to a colleague which resulted in the evacuation of a building.
According to , Deputy James Piper - who had served 35 years with the Pinellas County Sheiff's Office - sent the box with a handwritten sign which read "Boom" to Lt. Joseph Gerretz, who opened the box at his desk.
The officer then immediately told his supervisor about the package and parts of the building were evacuated while the Tampa Police Department bomb squad were called in.
Once the device was determined to not be a threat, Pinellas Sheriff Bob Gualtieri later sent an email to the entire agency notifying all sheriff’s employees.
But after Piper saw the email, he contacted his supervisor and informed him that he had sent the package to the lieutenant as a joke and resigned.
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