CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas – A Texas man who survived a mass shooting during a video game tournament in Jacksonville, Florida, last month died Sunday in a car crash.

Ryen Aleman, 25, of Robstown, Texas, died in a single-vehicle accident Sunday, said Sgt. Nathan Brandley, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety.

Brandley said Aleman was traveling west on Highway 44 when he lost control of his vehicle. The highway connects Corpus Christi with the farming town of Robstown. Robstown is about 20 miles west of Corpus Christi and has a population of about 12,000.

The vehicle overturned several times and crashed into nearby railroad tracks. Aleman was not wearing a seatbelt, Brandley said.

Friends and family of Aleman took to Facebook to send their condolences. Some friends commented on a photo he posted the night before that read "RIP" and "I can't believe (you're) gone."

Monica Rivera, Aleman's mother, created a GoFundMe account for funeral expenses.

Aug. 27:How the Jacksonville shooting unfolded: Terror inside a room, agony streamed online

Aug. 26:3 dead after shooting rampage at Madden tourney at Jacksonville Landing

"He was a survivor of the Jacksonville shooting at the Madden tournament and we were beyond blessed that he was okay and still here with us, but not even a month later, our Lord decided to call him home," the page states. "He was loved by his family and his friends, the happiest, funny, and most easy person to get along with ... We are hoping to raise money to give him a proper burial that he deserves."

In a Facebook post after the shooting Aug. 26 at Chicago Pizza, Aleman wrote: "Y’all wouldn’t believe this while playing in this Madden tournament I am the luckiest guy to be living right now someone came and shot up this tourney I’m taking off now and never coming back!!! Prayers for everyone still there," the post read.

Two people were killed in that shooting; the gunman took his own life, police said. Eleven others were injured.

In an interview with the Caller Times, a member of the USA TODAY NETWORK, Aleman said that up until the shooting, everything seemed normal. Aleman hid in the bathroom during the shooting.

He got out of the building and promptly went to the airport to go home.

"(The people who died) were good people and good players," Aleman said at the time. "They had families. I don't know. I'm still at a loss for words."

Contributing: Alexandria Rodriguez and Mark Young, Corpus Christi (Texas) Caller Times. Follow Monica Lopez on Twitter: @CallerMonica