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1[[quoteright:350:[[Franchise/StarWars https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Emperor_Bzzt_5666.jpg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Who ordered the medium-rare Jedi?]]
3
4->''"It's called the Agony Matrix. Direct neuro-stimulation of pain receptors... All of them. Imagine the worst pain you have ever felt in your life times a thousand. Now imagine that pain continuing forever.\
5...Oh, that's right. You don't '''have''' to imagine."''
6-->-- '''Darkseid''', ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'', "[[Recap/JusticeLeagueUnlimitedS3E13Destroyer Destroyer]]"
7
8There's a special place in the heart of ScienceFiction and {{Fantasy}} geeks for the Agony Beam, usually because it's carved that chunk out of our collective heart and crawled into the resultant cavity. Despite being an old-school staple that's used to the brink of [[DeadHorseTrope cliche]] and [[UndeadHorseTrope back]], it still sees widespread use and continues to serve a useful purpose: causing PG-rated pain on victims, much like an evil version of TheParalyzer.
9
10Along with its big brother the DeathRay, the Agony Beam is a staple in the armory/spellbook of every EvilOverlord and EvilSorcerer worth their salt. It is the Swiss Army Knife of a villain's arsenal: at low levels it enforces obedience when defiant prisoners are ordered to KneelBeforeZod, it [[VillainousDemotivator serves as punishment]] for [[SurroundedByIdiots incompetent minions]] in place of [[YouHaveFailedMe more lethal measures]], and prolonged use or higher settings work as a (bloodless) [[ColdBloodedTorture torture]] method, and when in excessive use or high power settings it can drive one mad or outright kill the victim. Usually it's depicted as a beam that emanates either from a gemmed ring, a staff, a ray gun, or even a miniature lightning storm. This last one works wonderfully as part of the lightshow when the villain gets DrunkOnTheDarkSide. When the victim is a major character, the Agony Beam is usually accompanied by EvilGloating.
11
12As mentioned earlier, the Agony Beam is rated PG. This is because, like the DeathRay, it's very "clean", leaves no [[ScarsAreForever scars]], and is much less {{squick}}y than [[ColdBloodedTorture comparable]] [[JackBauerInterrogationTechnique torture tropes]] while being [[WeHaveWaysOfMakingYouTalk just as effective]]. Like ElectricTorture, the lack of physical injury means the hero will be able to continue in the plot once it's over. That said, authors can cause such unbearable levels of agony that it can [[EmptyShell break the victim's mind]]. All things considered, even at low settings the Agony Beam is the moral equivalent of a [[KickTheDog Dog-Kicking Ray]], a fact usually reinforced by the wielder [[EvilFeelsGood getting off on using it]]. It's not going to be just rated ''G'' because... well... it'd be a pretty dark prospect for little kids.
13
14When turned on a hero, they will demonstrate their [[HeroicResolve mettle]] by ''not'' bending knee until it's at least two settings higher than necessary. Of course, at one point you can expect the villain to have their weapon [[HoistByHisOwnPetard turned against them]] (usually thanks to [[MirrorsReflectEverything mirrors]] and/or [[ReflectingLaser silver trays]]) and [[ScreamsLikeALittleGirl do much less well.]]
15
16Closely related to ElectricTorture. The "Increase the intensity!" sample conversation there applies for this too. May be part of a RoboticTortureDevice's arsenal. If used in a device attached to keep someone compliant, it becomes a ShockCollar.
17Can be a cause of ImHavingSoulPains.
18
19Contrast with ElectricInstantGratification.
20
21----
22!Examples:
23
24[[foldercontrol]]
25
26[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
27* In ''Anime/MazingerZ'' and ''Anime/{{Mazinkaiser}}'', the villainous Baron Ashura often uses this, in the form of a staff that shoots a blast of (usually) non-lethal electricity. [[MorallyAmbiguousDoctorate Dr. Hell]] also uses an identical staff to punish Ashura when they screw up (or a device on his belt also shoots one).
28* The manga and anime ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' brings us Tsukuyomi, a Genjutsu that is instantly cast and lets you experience [[YearInsideHourOutside 72 hours in a couple of seconds]], all while under the complete control of the user. Naturally, torture is one of the more common uses for it. Both victims in the first part of Naruto were out for a couple of weeks and needed the best medic the Narutoverse has to heal them. In the second part, the BigBad wants to use it [[spoiler:to control the entire world, albeit not to torture but to create the ideal dream world]].
29* ''Manga/FairyTail'':
30** Freed Justine writes magic runes that inflict a variety of effects, including "Pain" and "Suffering" runes.
31** Kyouka can magnify her target's senses with her Enchantment Curse via "Pain Amplification" so that no matter how tough they are, they ''will'' be screaming in agony. When she goes all-out with it to hit multiple targets, she can even fire it off in the form of sparking green energy reminiscent of Force Lightning.
32** Mary's magic involves infecting her targets with viruses causing immense pain. She notes she ''could'' make it a OneHitKill by targeting the brain specifically, but admits she prefers targeting "less" vital organs like the stomach to draw out their suffering and pain for her amusement.
33* ''Manga/OnePiece'' gives a somewhat odd example of this with Bartholomew Kuma. He has the powers of the Nikyu-Nikyu no Mi/Paw-Paw Fruit, which places animal paw pads on his hands that give him the power to repulse ''nigh anything''. This includes such abstract concepts as ''pain''. As in he can press his pads against a person in agony, repulse all the pain out of him and form it into a globe-like paw-shaped bubble. Break the bubble and you experience all the extracted pain at once.
34[[/folder]]
35
36[[folder:Comic Books]]
37* ComicBook/{{Ultron}}, of ''ComicBook/TheAvengers'' fame is incredibly fond of his encephalo-ray, which is a MindProbe with added pain. It doesn't need to hurt, Ultron just likes hurting people.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Fan Works]]
41* In the ParodyFic ''[[https://archiveofourown.org/works/12378786 Captain Proton and the Planet of Lesbians]]'', Queen Sapphia has a [[TorpedoTits Battle Bra]] that shoots Captain Proton with an agony beam and [[SexySecretary Constance Goodheart]] with ElectricInstantGratification.
42* In ''[[Fanfic/{{Eleutherophobia}} Ghost in the Shell]]'', Tom describes that after his escape attempt in ''Literature/{{Animorphs}} #1: The Invasion'', the Yeerks punished him and the other hosts by making every one of their nerves feel excruciating pain.
43* The Slave King often uses this in ''Fanfic/TheGreatSlaveKing'' on anyone who has particularly displeased him.
44* ''Fanfic/{{Frostbite}}'' has a Breen captain use a derivation of a Klingon painstick on Commander Tess Phohl. Dalsh Ruul says he can finely control exactly how much it hurts, and can also activate pleasure centers to create emotional whiplash.
45* ''Fanfic/HyruleWarriorsHeroesThroughTime'': Cia has quite the habit of using magical lightning on Volga and Wizzro whenever they talk back to her.
46* ''Fanfic/Plan7Of9FromOuterSpace''. MadScientist Dr. Zarkendorf puts our heroes in his Pain Amplification Chamber. "From all six facets, concentrated waves of neuronic energy will bombard every nerve-ending!" They escape just before it activates using the power of The Farce.
47* The torture brand that Omen put on Cyrus in ''Fanfic/SkylandersAcademyNewHorizon'' allows him to inflict terrible pain on Cyrus at will. Cyrus describes it as such:
48-->Do you remember, when you were a kid, and you had this… unnatural fear of the doctor's syringes? Do you remember how much it hurt? To have that little metal needle poke through your skin? How loud you screamed when it was just buried in you skin, not really doing anything at all except hurting you? I want you, to take that feeling, that surgically exact pain that you felt in one tiny spot on your arm, and I want you to picture that feeling spread across your whole body. Not a single inch left untouched. A perfect blanket of minuscule needles piercing your skin for minutes on end.
49* Marc Maddhouse's PoweredArmor in ''[[Fanfic/TheZeroContextSeries Zero Context: Taking Out the Trash]]'' carries a weapon called the Neutron Shatter. It kills off any cell nuclei it hits and sets off every pain sensor in the targeted area, turning it an unhealthy shade of gray in the process. Callista's reaction to getting struck by it shows that it is not a pleasant experience.
50[[/folder]]
51
52[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
53* In the movie adaptation of ''Film/TheCrow1994'', Eric defeats the Big Bad with this trope by [[spoiler:Agony Beaming his fiancée's experience of being gang raped, beaten and dying from her injuries over 30 hours later into the Big Bad, rendering the Big Bad incapacitated and vulnerable to the final death-dealing blow.]]
54* Emperor Ming in the 1980s ''Film/{{Flash Gordon|1980}}'' movie used this on Flash several times. Ming had a much less impressive-looking version back in the [[Film/FlashGordonSerial 1940 serial]].
55* ''Film/SantaClausConquersTheMartians'' gives us the Tickle Ray. If the Agony Beam is PG torture, the Tickle Ray is G torture.
56* In ''Film/{{Spaceballs}}'', Dark Helmet punishes an insubordinate mook by using his Schwarz ring to produce an agony beam that is [[GroinAttack directed at a particularly sensitive part]] of the mook's body. The anticipation of him doing this again becomes a RunningGag among the other Spaceballs.
57* ''Franchise/StarWars'': Force Lightning (first seen being used by [[TheEmperor Emperor Palpatine]] on Luke Skywalker in ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'') is a very effective means of torture, which made it a favored technique for the Sith and [[ShockAndAwe despite its appearance]] may well have been the ''only'' thing Creator/GeorgeLucas intended it to be; its use as a viable combat technique that even light-side force wielders had access to was introduced later on and by different writers because [[RuleOfCool it just looked so freaking cool]]. One nonlethal variant called "Electric Judgement" was used by Jedi Master Plo Koon which apparently functioned more like a taser, though anyone who's been on the receiving end of a taser can tell you that it's still very much a pretty unpleasant experience.
58* ''Film/HellboundHellraiserII'''s Leviathan likes to shoot people with an agony beam.
59* In ''Film/Fortress1992'', when prisoners arrive at the Fortress (a giant underground prison), the last part of the processing involves the prisoners being forced to swallow a device called an "intestinator", which acts as an Agony Beam if they break the rules. For more severe infractions, it explodes.
60* ''Franchise/{{Ghostbusters}}'':
61** ''Film/{{Ghostbusters|1984}}'': "Are you a god?" "....no." "THEN DIIIEEE!" :zaaaaaaaaaaap: Clearly Gozer was pulling her punches here; since it mostly just knocked them down, almost blowing them off the roof of the apartment complex. According to the {{novelization}}, the proton packs absorbed most of the energy and nearly overloaded as a result.
62** The [[Film/GhostbustersII second film]] has Vigo disabling the team with a paralyzing (and painful) dose of negative slime, which he could dial up to a full Agony Beam. The slime lost its effect when New Year's struck and the slime heard the jubilant singing outside.
63* Inverted in ''Film/{{Barbarella}}, Queen of the Galaxy'': villain Duran Duran tortures the heroine by hooking her into a device that plays her sexual responses like organ pipes, the goal being to orgasm her to death. Barbarella being [[TooKinkyToTorture Barbarella]], it doesn't work.
64* In ''Film/ThePrincessBride'', Count Rugen's "machine" isn't so much a ''beam'' as it is a [[BuffySpeak life-sucky thingy]], but since it causes intense pain to the victims at various settings, it qualifies as the trope.
65* Another "life-sucky thingy" is whatever the MCP uses to de-rez (kill) errant programs in ''Film/{{Tron}}''. First, we see it used on Clu, then we see Dumont and other elderly (presumably user-interface) programs being put through the same torture.
66* Kalgan of ''Film/SpaceMutiny'' has a device he uses to torture the heroine that he claims is modeled on "ancient" dentistry equipment. He shoots a laser at one of her teeth. Doesn't seem to bother her very much, and the laser actually makes the same noise as a dentist's drill.
67* ''Film/GenesisII''. The mutants have devices that inflict pain by touch. The devices can be set to deliver various levels of pain, from mild correction up to incapacitation.
68* PlayedForLaughs in ''Film/BackToTheFuture1'', where Marty, posing as an evil alien, [[InvokedTrope invokes]] this trope using a Walkman and a Music/VanHalen tape. Surprisingly, the victim didn't notice the headset over his ears, but it's safe to assume he was distracted by the yellow-suited figure threatening to melt his brain.
69* ''Film/BarbWire'': Colonel Pryzer interrogates an unnamed woman by hooking her up to a device that causes pain to a body part when he touches a matching body part on a screen. When she finally cracks and shares what she knows, Pryzer [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness runs his hand along the entire screen, which is so painful that it kills her]].
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Gamebooks]]
73* In the ''Literature/LoneWolf'' series, psychic attacks -- including those used by the hero, like Mindblast and Psi-surge -- are explicitly causing pain any time their effects are described in detail. Kai Lords mostly use them in combat to weaken, disarm or hurt enemies. Villains like the Darklords, of course, have no such qualms and are known to unleash such powers [[YouHaveFailedMe on minions who've disappointed them]].
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Literature]]
77* The Torturer's Lens from the ''Literature/AlcatrazSeries''.
78* Particularly effective one in ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' that also had an opposite number feature built into the device. The idea was, that while pain was a good form of torture, a better method was to cause pain, then overwhelming happiness, then quickly turn it back to pain to break the victim faster. Rachel considered its use on Tobias one of the worst things that was done in the war.
79** Another book described how the Yeerk Dracon Beams were descended from Andalite Shredder weapons but were altered to cause as much pain as possible. Shredder weapons set to full power vaporize targets almost instantly and painlessly. Dracon Beams set to full vaporize victims slowly enough that they can feel their molecules explode.
80* ''Literature/CreatureCourt'' has a rare ''heroic'' use, when Velody, having just become head of the titular backstabbing, dysfunctional Court, who only respect shows of power, uses her animor like this against Livilla. She's still horrified by herself and utterly relieved when it's over, but notes that it's better than Ashiol's option: straight-up gutting people.
81* In ''Literature/DestinysForge'' (set in Niven's Known Space but written by Paul Chafe), the Patriarch's Telepath projects a ''void'' beam: a loss of sensation so horrible you'll beat your brains out on the ground just so you can ''FEEL SOMETHING''.
82* In ''Literature/{{Wintersmith}}'', it's shown that very skilled ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' witches like Granny Weatherwax can take the pain of an ailing patient out of their body and transfer it to somewhere else. ''Literature/IShallWearMidnight'' shows that, if push comes to shove, that somewhere else could be some''one'' else.
83* ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'':
84** In ''Literature/{{Dune}}'', the Reverend Mother tests Paul Atreides's humanity with a box that directly stimulates the pain receptors in Paul's hand. She also holds a poisoned needle that will kill him if he withdraws the hand from the box. The logic is that a lesser creature will simply react to the pain and die from the poison, while an intelligent one will be able to override the instinct and save itself. Paul does not know this until he is told to withdraw his hand from the box, however, and what he ''thinks'' is happening to his hand is described in gory, most definitely not PG-rated detail. The miniseries adaptation shows us (either as an illusion to make it even more of a test, or that's just what Paul thinks is happening, like in the book is left up to the viewer) his hand being StrippedToTheBone.
85** "Pain amplifiers" are mentioned in passing, that presumably make conventional torture that bit more effective with no greater risk of death.
86* The Cruciatus Curse in Creator/JKRowling's ''Franchise/HarryPotter'' is a torture spell, designated as one of the three "Unforgivable Curses" that result in a lifetime sentence in [[HellholePrison Azkaban]] for the caster[[note]]For context, the other two spells are a mind control spell and an instant kill spell[[/note]]. Its sole function is to cause excruciating pain for its target, and can only be successfully cast if the caster genuinely wants the target to suffer. It's specifically stated that "righteous anger" doesn't fuel it, only actual ''malice'' will. [[spoiler:When Harry actually tries to use it in anger in Book 5, it doesn't work properly because he doesn't have enough drive to seriously harm or kill anyone; this changes in Book 7, as Amycus Carrow finds out by spitting in the face of Professor [=MacGonagall=].]]
87* [[EvilSorcerer Jade Eyes]] uses this combined with [[ChemicallyInducedInsanity drugs]] on Ward in the second book of the ''Literature/{{Hurog}}'' duology, to make sure the torture leaves no marks. Ward doesn't quite break, but it's a close-run thing.
88** The [[RestrainingBolt slavery curse]] on Oreg seems to work this way as well, leaving him writhing in agony on the ground when he disobeys an accidental order and unable to move, speak or even scream when he moves too far from Ward. Ward is ''horrified''.
89* A contemporary use in ''The Killer Ascendant''. Literature/JohnRain has to rescue his friend Dox who is being held prisoner on a yacht, so he borrows a man-portable version of the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_Denial_System Active Denial System]]. Dox doesn't mind being subjected to agonizing pain by his rescuers, as one of the guards [[BigDamnHeroes was just about to]] [[GroinAttack castrate him]].
90* Inverted -- but oddly horribly -- in Larry Niven's ''Literature/KnownSpace'' stories with the tasp. The tasp doesn't stimulate pain; it [[ElectricInstantGratification stimulates]] ''[[ElectricInstantGratification pleasure]]'', simultaneously being just as incapacitating as pain and threatening a victim with permanent addiction. In ''Literature/TheRingworldEngineers'', Louis reveals to Chmee that someone once hit him with a tasp. Later, this caused Louis to become a "wirehead", addicted to a wire plugged into his head to stimulate the pleasure centers of the brain.
91* Creator/SergeyLukyanenko's novel ''Literature/LineOfDelirium'' starts with the main character being killed by an algopistol, a weapon that causes all nerves in his body to simultaneously transmit extreme pain signals to the brain. Normally, the person dies of shock. It is unclear if the main character died from shock or from bleeding out, as his thrashing caused him to cut his body on some super-thin webbing. He gets better.
92** The algopistol is specifically referred to as a weapon for losers.
93* In the ''Literature/LogansRun'' novel, the Sandmen carried a Gun that fired a "Homer", which homed in on the target and, on impact, stimulated every pain nerve in the body before killing the victim. It was the primary deterrent against Runners: If you turn yourself in for Deep Sleep on Lastday, you'll be put to death by pleasurable gas, but if you Run, you'll suffer the Homer.
94* A form of this is used on Winston in the Ministry of Love, among many other tortures, in ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour''.
95* ''Literature/ReignOfTheSevenSpellblades'': The pain curse, ''[[LatinIsMagic Dolor]]''. It has a NecessaryDrawback in that it can only inflict pain the caster has experienced, and it's hardly ever used in combat, but it's a favorite of mages who wish to KickTheDog: SadistTeacher Darius Grenville is notorious for using it on students who stand up to him despite the school having banned teachers from using it on students. [[spoiler:Unfortunately for Darius, main character Oliver Horn has the GhostMemory of his mother's RasputinianDeath at Darius and his coconspirators' hands to fall back on when casting it: he only stops when Darius begs for death.]]
96* In Creator/AlastairReynolds's ''Literature/RevelationSpace'' universe, this is a preferred method of torturing a Conjoiner; since Conjoiners can use their neural implants to block all physical pain, the only way to guarantee that they'll feel pain is by directly communicating it to their brains.
97* In ''Literature/RogueSorcerer'', Sorcerers are shown commanding demons to wrack their enemies with terrible pain.
98* In ''Literature/SpeakerForTheDead'', the field that surrounds the small colony on Lusitania, preventing anyone from trying to climb over the fence (most colonists are forbidden from interacting with the native Pequeninos). It's later revealed that the Pequeninos can chew a certain herb that temporarily makes them immune to the pain (or rather, they still sense the pain but perceive it as happening to someone else). When [[spoiler:Miro]] attempts to follow suit, he finds out that the herb doesn't work on humans and nearly dies. While the colonists do shut off the power to the field (which is treason as far as the Starways Congress is concerned), [[spoiler:Miro]] still suffers a stroke and ends up unable to speak properly.
99* ''[[Literature/TheStainlessSteelRat The Stainless Steel Rat Goes to Hell]]'' features a whip-like device called a 'bioclast', used on slaves by an evil mine supervisor. Its effect is described by the protagonist/narrator as feeling "like the flesh had been sliced to the bone and boiling acid poured into the wound".
100* The agony booth and the agonizer are a feature of ''Franchise/StarTrek'''s "Mirror Universe" first introduced in the TOS episode "[[Recap/StarTrekS2E4MirrorMirror Mirror, Mirror]]." In the Creator/DianeDuane novel ''Dark Mirror,'' the crew of the ''Enterprise-D'' confront their mirror universe counterparts. In the mirror universe, Troi's role as [[PoliticalOfficer "ship's counselor"]] involves her using the agony booth a lot and the crew's agonizers take the place of combadges. It's even pointed out how the "old" agonizers were inefficient, brute instruments while the modern version is specifically designed to attack the wearer's most sensitive nerves.
101** In the [[Literature/StarTrekShatnerverse Shatnerverse]], the mirror Kirk explains how he eliminated his universe's Pavel Chekov after he found out that he had plotted to assassinate him. He threw him into an agony booth, set it to medium intensity, as a "showcase of [his] leniency". He described it thusly: "Think of a dull toothache throughout your body, in every part. Bearable, but most uncomfortable. And then I kept Pavel in it. It took thirteen days for him to die." (Preserver, 2000)
102* ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'' has a ''lot'' of examples of this. In addition to the Force Lightning featured at the top of the page, there are neuronic whips, the nerve disruptor which was a quite literal agony beam, and the scan grid used by Darth Vader on Han Solo and later improved by Imperial Director Ysanne Izard.
103** There's also the charric, which was the Chiss' equivalent of a blaster. Due to the way they worked, charrics ''couldn't'' use a stun setting like blasters and the designers had to settle for a setting that caused intense pain.
104* In ''Literature/TheStormlightArchive'', "painrials" are an {{inver|tedTrope}}sion invented by the {{Magitek}} engineer Navani Kholin: on contact with someone who's in pain, they absorb the pain so the person doesn't feel it. [[spoiler:Played straight in ''Literature/{{Oathbringer}}'' when someone tries to assassinate Navani and learns the hard way that her personal, much-used painrial has a ''reverse'' switch.]]
105* In Creator/AndreNorton's ''Literature/StormOverWarlock'', Shann's first test is being trapped in the memory of a bully using an agony whip on him. Despite the pain of the first blow, he manages to dispel it by remembering it was a decade ago and the man is dead now.
106* Peona's power from ''Literature/SuperMinion''. She can create glowing, spectral weapons that cause pain on contact. It backfires on Tofu by causing human.exe to stop working without actually incapacitating him.
107* The Agiel in Creator/TerryGoodkind's ''Literature/SwordOfTruth'' series is a magical stick used by the [[TheBaroness Mord-Sith]] to inflict pain on anyone it touches. The Agiel also hurts the Mord-Sith if it's the same one she was 'trained' with, but they're conditioned to withstand the pain. It is fatal, however, if it touches anywhere near the heart. There's also Wizard's Pain.
108** Mord-Sith even use the Agiel during ''sex''. Mistress Denna, the main torturer in the first book, tells the protagonist she has never had intercourse without it.
109** In the ''Series/LegendOfTheSeeker'' TV series based on the books, [[BigBad Darken Rahl]] has also conditioned himself to withstand the pain of an Agiel. In one scene, he makes out with Denna while touching her with one.
110*** In the book, wizards also tend to be conditioned for such pain - EmpathicHealing makes a high pain threshold necessary (there are also pain spells that work by touch). As for making out... a Mord-Sith "marriage" ceremony is basically a french kiss with an Agiel between the two mouths.
111* In the BizarroUniverse ''Literature/TransformersShatteredGlass'', the Autobots have the Agonizing Rehabilitation Chambers, (inspired by both the healing CR Chambers from ''WesternAnimation/BeastWars'' and the agony booths from ''Franchise/StarTrek'''s MirrorUniverse ) which [[BadBoss Optimus]] uses to dole out punishment to anyone he's not happy with.
112* Jane from ''Literature/TheTwilightSaga'' had an ability which allows her to cause someone pain merely by looking at them.
113* In ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'', the FunctionalMagic of the One Power can create this effect, which {{the Dreaded}} TortureTechnician Semirhage absolutely loves, since it can create pain that would be deadly if caused by physical trauma. She also {{invert|edTrope}}s this by using the same effect to overwhelm people with pleasure, which she notes as being even harder to counter with HeroicWillpower; one of her victims actually dies from trying to resist it.
114* In Niven's ''Literature/AWorldOutOfTime'', there is Mirelly-Lyra Zeelashisthar's silver cane, which can inflict crippling ''emotional'' pain. It was designed by a world-conquering State as a ''[[TwoPlusTortureMakesFive conditioning]]'' tool for recalcitrant ''slaves.'' A highly effective one, too; the protagonist is so traumatized by the experience that just ''looking'' at Mirelly terrifies him.
115-->It wasn’t physical, this agony. It was sorrow and helpless rage and guilt. He wanted to die.
116* ''Literature/{{City of Bones|1995}}'' by Creator/MarthaWells: The only pieces of functional {{Magitek}} that survived from TheBeforetimes are painrods, which inflict incapacitating agony with a touch. They're the exclusive possession of the Warder {{Magic Knight}}s.
117* In ''Literature/ThisAlienShore'', Guild members interrogate a criminal by using an illegal torture technique that involves directly stimulating his neural circuits. Even fractions of a second of agony are enough to break him.
118* In ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest'', the Goddess of Mercy Guanyin gives Xuansang a cursed circlet to put on Son Wukong's head that [[ClingyMacGuffin never comes off.]] If Xuansang says the correct phrase, it constricts and gives the Sage Equal To Heaven such a headache he'll do whatever Xuansang says to get it to stop.
119* Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Literature/TheStarsLikeDust'': The neuronic whip is an energy weapon that causes the pain nerves of its victims to be "universally and maximally stimulated". When one character is hit in the foot with one, the resulting sensation is compared to stepping into a bath of boiling lead, or that foot having a granite block dropped on it, or it being bitten off by a shark.
120* Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Literature/PebbleInTheSky'': The neuronic whip has several degrees of power, but Dr Arvardan gets to experience the highest levels, which cause every nerve in the body to react in pain, overstimulating him into unconsciousness.
121* Creator/IsaacAsimov and Creator/JanetAsimov's ''Literature/NorbyFindsAVillain'': One of the PsychicPowers developed by the Master Cult is the ability to cause pain at a distance. In a [[BadFuture false future]], each Master controls an entire planet, wielding their ability to inflict pain as a punishment for the smallest infraction.
122* ''Literature/TheBrotherhoodOfTheConch'': In ''Shadowland'', police officers in the city of Coal carry blue tubes that have no physical effects, but cause people to collapse in pain.
123* ''Literature/TheBrothersWar'': Ashnod's {{Magitek}} staff fires waves of energy which disrupt the target's nervous system, wracking them with pain. At higher intensities, it can kill outright.
124* ''Literature/ShatterTheSky'': Faris has the power to remake the pain from any old wound a person has suffered and so torture them by inflicting this once again.
125* ''Literature/SweetAndBitterMagic'': In the fight with Marlena, she uses a spell that causes pain to torture Wren.
126[[/folder]]
127
128[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
129* ''Series/BabylonFive'':
130** Narn "Pain-givers", seen in action in the attempt on G'Kar's life by the agent of a recently deceased rival.
131** [[UsefulNotes/JackTheRipper The Inquisitor]]'s cane, used in "[[Recap/BabylonFiveS02E21ComesTheInquisitor Comes the Inquisitor]]", sure qualifies.
132* ''Series/BlakesSeven'': In "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS3E1Aftermath Aftermath]]", weapons inventor Hal Mellanby uses "vitashock" rifles against barbarians trying to break into the entry hatch of his underground base -- the idea being aversion therapy so they'll associate the hatch with pain and stay away, avoiding the need to kill them. However, the barbarians aren't stupid; they work out what's happening and sneak up on their firing position during the night.
133* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
134** Used/threatened in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS12E4GenesisOfTheDaleks Genesis of the Daleks]]" by Davros against the Doctor/Harry and Sarah Jane.
135** Sutekh's eyes function as this in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS13E3PyramidsOfMars "Pyramids of Mars"]].
136** In "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS14E3TheDeadlyAssassin The Deadly Assassin]]", the Doctor is tortured to get him to confess with this.
137** ...and then, there's the MindProbe ("What? No NOT the mind PROBE!") from "[[Recap/DoctorWho20thASTheFiveDoctors The Five Doctors]]".
138** Used in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS22E2VengeanceOnVaros Vengeance on Varos]]", which leads to the odd spectacle of a shirtless Jason Connery being tortured by having a torch shined on his chest.
139** In "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E6Dalek Dalek]]", Henry van Statten's body scanner has this effect on the Doctor (with a direct visual CallBack to the torture scene in "Vengeance on Varos"). It's not clear if the pain is a standard side effect or due to van Statten mishandling the ImportedAlienPhlebotinum.
140** The Master uses this on the Doctor in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E17E18TheEndOfTime The End of Time]]". [[FoeRomanceSubtext And beautifully so]].
141** The Teselecta in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS32E8LetsKillHitler Let's Kill Hitler]]" punished historical criminals by intercepting them at the end of their lives to "give them hell." [[spoiler:The beam was used on River Song, but the Doctor intervened so it is unclear whether the ultimate function would have included death as well as pain.]]
142* The imprinting chairs in ''{{Series/Dollhouse}}'' can be used to generate this effect, as Bennett shows rather graphically to Echo.
143* In the miniseries ''Series/FrankHerbertsDune'', the box used by the Reverend Mother to torture Paul appears to be transparent and shows his hand searing from the heat. It's actually just a hologram meant to amplify the psychological effect.
144* Subverted in ''Series/{{Farscape}}'': the Scarran's natural agony beam is one of solid ''heat''. Not only can it kill, but the camera tends to linger on shots of the victim's skin bubbling and burning as they die- case in point, [[SmugSnake Prince Clavor]] and [[FrontierDoctor Diagnosan Tocot]].
145** Which shows the power the Ancients have when the Scarran Emperor Staleek tries to mind-probe "Einstein", only for the latter to NoSell the beam with a literal HandWave.
146** At some point Rygel decides to torture a captured Charrid with his own instrument. He mentions he knows Charrid torture instruments well, including that they contain a pain amplifier.
147* Creator/GeneRoddenberry's TV movie ''Genesis II'' featured the evil mutant [[MeaningfulName Tyranians]] using "stims" -- short rods which could be adjusted to induce either pain or pleasure on contact. Unsurprisingly, hero Dylan Hunt (the one ''[[Series/{{Andromeda}} that]]'' one was named for) didn't fall to the ground until the highest pain setting was used. Then they gave him a pleasure dose: carrot ''after'' stick.
148* In ''Series/{{Haven}}'', Jordan [=McKee=]'s Trouble is that if she makes skin contact with someone, that person experiences agonizing pain until she lets go. She has no control over it and hates it. Nathan Wuornos is immune because he has FeelNoPain.
149* In the ''Series/HenryDanger'' episode "Tears of the Jolly Beetle", Captain Mann asks to be shot with one he has to test that he was cured and is invulnerable again.
150* ''Series/KingdomAdventure'': Zordock has this ability: he fires beams at minions who annoy him, and while the beams don't do any visible damage, they do seem to cause at least moderate pain.
151* ''Series/MissionImpossible'': Barney is subjected to one that plays on the pain centres of his brain in "The Golden Serpent (Part 1)".
152* ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000'' spoofed this with Dr. Forrester's DEEEEEEEEP HUUUUUUUURTING, which he used to keep Joel/Mike and the bots in line. The exact nature of Deep Hurting changed from episode to episode; sometimes the Hurting seemed to be actual physical pain caused by a device, but sometimes it was simply the fact that our heroes [[SuckinessIsPainful had to sit through yet another awful movie]].
153** In ''[[Recap/MysteryScienceTheater3000TheMovie The Movie]]'', Dr. Forrester demands that Mike and the 'Bots bow to him. Then he turns and pulls a lever when they don't immediately obey. Whatever happens next, it appears to hurt ''the 'Bots'', too.
154** Also in episode #611, "[[Recap/MysteryScienceTheater3000S06E11LastOfTheWildHorses Last of the Wild Horses]]", Tom and Gypsy are thrust into the MirrorUniverse where Mike and Crow torment Frank and Dr. F. Crow screws something up, but has failed to keep the batteries in his personal agonizer charged and the Agony Booth is on the fritz -- again!
155** The "Brain Guys" were able to inflict pain using their minds to force Pearl and Professor Bobo to fight to the death. For some reason, it did not seem to work on Mike or the Bots.
156* ''Series/TheOutpost'': The Red Kinj gives its host the ability to inflict intense pain on anyone within a close radius.
157* In ''Series/StargateSG1'', the Goa'uld "hand device" has this as a standard feature. The area it affects is notably red for a while afterward. [[CardCarryingVillain Naturally]], they love to use it at every opportunity and SG-1 have been zapped so often they should all have a permanent sunburn. [[ButtMonkey Especially Daniel]], who in one later season episode quips, "I think I'm starting to get used to that," after it happens once again. It can kill, though, with prolonged use — this just doesn't happen, to the heroes, very often.
158** At first, one shot of the Zat gun was an Agony Beam, but it eventually became "phasers on stun."
159** The Goa'uld have another Agony Beam that looks like a cattle prod. When it's used, an orange light comes out of the victim's eyes and mouth, and presumably nose and ears (but that's harder to see). O'Neill gets this one used on him a lot.
160*** In an alternate universe, the US is under martial law after revealing the existence of the stargate has caused mass rioting, so the Secret Service is now using the "cattle prod" as a standard tool.
161* ''Franchise/StarTrek'''s MirrorUniverse had a device called the "Agonizer," and the "Agony Booths."
162** Interestingly, the Agony Booth didn't exactly make the ColdBloodedTorture any less disturbing to watch. When ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'' revisited the MirrorUniverse in the "[[Recap/StarTrekEnterpriseS04E18InAMirrorDarkly In A Mirror, Darkly]]" prequel episodes, showing among other things the invention of the booth's first prototype and its earliest usage, a lot of the filming crew got seriously upset while shooting the scene in which Mirror Tucker pleads his innocence while Mirror Archer tries to torture a confession out of him using the booth.
163** The booths are sufficiently bad [[Website/TheAgonyBooth one bad-movie recap website]] took its name from them.
164** The mirror universe returns in ''Series/StarTrekDiscovery,'' and Lorca is put in an agony booth for ''days'' in punishment for something his mirror counterpart did. [[spoiler: Or so we think at the time]]. He gets major points for ordering the crew, posing as their mirror selves, to not risk blowing their cover by helping him (and he gets ''more'' points for simply ''being able to speak'' while in the booth; few are that tough!)
165** One thing about the agony booth - it's not very highly special-effect-ed, even in later decades. Bringing home the NightmareFuel is purely up to the actor's performance. When done well, again, ''the production crew'' will be disturbed by it!
166** ''VideoGame/StarTrekOnline'' features a version of the mirror universe where the Terran Empire never fell. Agonizer/Agony Booth technology is integrated into phasers, so you can set them to torture your enemy instead of stunning or killing. (It seems pointless and impractical ForTheEvulz-ness, but if you need an enemy alive and awake for on-the-spot interrogation or to enter a code or some such, extreme pain would be a way to stop them from attacking/fleeing but not render them unable to do what you need them to do.)
167** In a ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' Mirror Universe episode Mirror-Bashir uses a handheld agonizer on the Intendant. Being TooKinkyToTorture, she purrs "If you want to teach me a lesson, you'll have to turn that up a bit."
168** In "[[Recap/StarTrekS1E9DaggerOfTheMind Dagger of the Mind]]", there is a MindRape machine that looks like a sun lamp shining on a hair-salon chair. And Kirk isn't even strapped in. He '''could''' just stand up and walk off, but apparently it's so intense that he only sits there writhing in pain as a sort of post-hypnotic suggestion is used on him.
169** The Eymorgs' pain bracelets in "[[Recap/StarTrekS3E1SpocksBrain Spock's Brain]]". The unbelievable acting done in this episode would be spoofed many times, most notably in ''Series/TheWonderYears''.
170** In "[[Recap/StarTrekS3E8ForTheWorldIsHollowAndIHaveTouchedTheSky For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky]]" the Instrument of Obedience, a subcutaneous implant placed in a person's head, can inflict horrible, even lethal, pain on them when they violate any rule set down by the Oracle.
171** The pain implants used by the mercenaries on [[TheCaptain Picard]] and [[NumberTwo Riker]] in the two-part episode ''[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS7E4Gambit Gambit]]''.
172** Also, the pain implants used by the Cardassian interrogator on Picard in "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS6E10ChainOfCommand Chain of Command]]". The writer, Frank Abatemarco, consulted Amnesty International on the psychology of torturers and their victims, and the actor Creator/PatrickStewart studied tapes from AI in preparing for the scenes. Notably, this one has no sound or light effect to tell the audience when to flinch, just ''really'' good acting.
173** Klingon Pain Sticks, from several TNG episodes. It turns out that as cruel as Klingons can be, they actually need their pain (quote from ''[[Film/StarTrekVTheFinalFrontier Star Trek V]]'' notwithstanding) from time to time, particularly for important warrior rites. That's right, it's not a device to torture enemies, but something Klingons ''voluntarily'' submit to it to prove their toughness in rituals.
174** TOS Klingons used an agonizer as well in " [[Recap/StarTrekS3E7DayOfTheDove Day of the Dove]]", and in "[[Recap/StarTrekS2E16TheGamestersOfTriskelion The Gamesters of Triskelion]]" collars of obedience were collars used to keep the thralls of Triskelion in place.
175** The ''Star Trek: The Next Generation'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS3E18Allegiance Allegiance]]" also had a green ray effect that did this. Certainly a good example of how simple the effects need to be.
176** In "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS5E15PowerPlay Power Play]]", the ''heroes'' use a plasma beam to inflict pain on three crewmembers who have been possessed by aliens - not as a means of torture, but to get the aliens to leave.
177** Then there was the energy field the space jellyfish in "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS1E1EncounterAtFarpoint Encounter at Farpoint]]" subjects Groppler Zorn to, though the sounds he was making made it sound more like he was in a tickle ray.
178** In the ''Star Trek: Voyager'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS3E8FuturesEnd Future's End]]", Henry Starling kidnaps the Emergency Medical Hologram so he can torture him for information. Starling reprograms the Doctor so that, using a remote control, Starling can cause the Doctor to feel as though he is on fire.
179** The Varon-T Disruptor from "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS3E22TheMostToys The Most Toys]]". Only 5 were made, and they're illegal galaxy-wide. 'Cause not only does the disruptor disintegrate a victim, it disintegrates them ''slowly''. Molecule by molecule. Leaving the victim to feel unbelievable agony before dying.
180* Angels of ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' have this power, though it's explained that when they make a human double over in agony, it's specifically because the angel is messing with the human's internal workings (breaking their bones, removing their lungs, giving them stage 4 stomach cancer) in a nasty way.
181* ''Series/TheThundermans'': Max once invented a "Helium Pain Blaster", which not only tortures the target, but also forces them to speak in HeliumSpeech.
182* ''Series/WonderWoman1975'': In "The Man Who Made Volcanoes", Wonder Woman endures the prolonged laser blast of a weapon designed to cause volcanic eruptions.
183* ''Series/{{Enlisted}}'' pitted the squad in a battle exercise against a robotic spider piloted by an officer wielding an energy weapon that causes those struck to [[BrownNote lose control of their bowels]]. They wind up soiled but ultimately victorious.
184* ''Series/TheWheelOfTime2021'': The sul'dam (the Seanchan women in control of enslaved channelers called damane) can cause them pain using their gauntlet, which is used for breaking them. Further, damane attempting to remove the a'dam collars that control them or harming sul'dam causes them great pain too.
185[[/folder]]
186
187[[folder:Music]]
188* The music video for Music/Powerman5000's ''When Worlds Collide'' has a pastiche of [[Film/FlashGordon1980 Ming]] with two agony beam rings, the hero manages to overpower his beams with his own [[KiManipulation energy blast]], disintegrating him.
189[[/folder]]
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191[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
192* ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheLost'': One sourcebook mentions a realm in Arcadia which is essentially built around {{Zeerust}}. Those changelings taken to this realm have metal bands implanted in their heads that can cause incredible pain if they screw up or go into an area they're not supposed to; the bands can also give sensations of pleasure if they do their jobs properly. To escape, they need to either cut the bands out or resist the pain long enough to get across the boundary between the realm and the Hedge. The trickiest part is that the pain switches to especially-intense pleasure right before they reach the Hedge.
193* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'': There are several lines of spells that do this.
194** The Nybor's line of spells (going from "Gentle Reminder" to "Wrathful Castigation") being particular favorites. 3.x also has an AlwaysChaoticEvil version named "Wrack".
195** The big daddy of all these spells would have to be "Eternity of Torture", which fills the target with unbearable agony unto them being unable to do anything besides writhe in pain. And it makes them immortal. So they can suffer forever.
196** The not-so-subtly named "Power Word: Pain".
197** Not to mention "Love's Agony" from the ''Book of Vile Darkness''. To add to the torture, it doesn't even harm the person it hits, instead harming the person they care for most, making it a spell reserved almost exclusively for being pointlessly cruel.
198* Nicol Bolas of ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' can cause horrific levels of mental and physical agony at the same time with but the slightest caress. And not only was he born with this power, it's his most infamous ability.
199* ''TabletopGame/{{Godforsaken}}'': Cambions can fire ruby rays from their fingers that inflict torturous pain in their targets.
200* ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}: Magic'' has "Pain" and the much worse "Agonize" (turns every sensation into extreme pain). ''Ultratech'' has Sonic Nauseators (pain and loss of bowel control) as well as the Neural Disruptors. Any Affliction with the "Agony" Enhancement does exactly this.
201* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
202** The [[TheFairFolk Drukhari]] a number of weapons designed specifically to cause as much suffering in their unfortunate victims as possible, the most common of which is the Agoniser. These energised whips latch onto the target's nervous system to directly stimulate their pain sensors, instantly incapacitating or killing the unfortunate victim. In the 8th Edition rules, this is represented by the Agoniser always having a 50% chance of wounding a non-vehicle enemy. The race also has a literal Agony Beam, the Stinger Pods fitted to the mobile torture devices known as Talos Pain Engines, which siphon and store the pain of their victims so that it can be unleashed as a beam of pure agony during battle.
203** Fabius Bile, one of the settings most infamous MadScientist[=s=], wields a skull topped cane, known as the 'Rod of Torment'. This horrific device is capable of amplifying the pain it causes to its victim so that even those that suffer even the slightest cut will be incapacitated with agony. How this is represented in the game varies depending on the edition with some forcing a model to be removed from the battlefield after suffering a single wound while the 8th Edition rules have the Rod inflicting a random number of wounds against non-vehicles.
204[[/folder]]
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206[[folder:Video Games]]
207* In ''VideoGame/CorpseParty'' after the True End of Chapter 4 of "Blood Covered," Ayumi gets to see from one of the ghost children, Yuki Kanno, just what happened. [[spoiler: She and three other children were tied up and brought to the basement of Heavenly Host Elementary School by the principal's son and Yuki is blindfolded, but she hears every last gory sound. The first victim, Ryou Yoshizawa, is stabbed to death and has his [[TongueTrauma tongue cut out.]] The second child, Tokiko Tsuji, is stabbed in the mouth so much that her head just about comes off! When it's finally Yuki's turn, the blindfold comes off and it turns out the man is ''cowering in the corner''. The real killer is [[EnfantTerrible Sachiko Shinozaki]] holding a pair of scissors and she stabs them into Yuki's eye until there's nothing but soup.]] Ayumi got to feel each and every last sensation of fear and pain in those moments.
208* ''VideoGame/TheFermiParadox'': One [[RandomEvent event]] has a civilization invent one of these, and how widespread it becomes depends on [[AGodIsYou the player]], with potential outcomes resulting in it either being used only for the worst of the worst, or it being used for every single little infraction. However, there is a third option if the player is willing to spend some of their Synthesis, resulting in the device only working on [[TooKinkyToTorture those who consent to it]], meaning it is only ever used for extremely kinky activities.
209* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' has at least two spells whose names imply that they do this. Priests have Shadow Word: Pain and Warlocks have Curse of Agony. Both of these spells inflict continuous shadow-elemental damage over a period of time and can kill their targets.
210** Priest's Mind Flay and Mind Sear probably also count (maybe Warlock's Drain Soul too). All are channeled spells that project a beam that rends the target's mind or souls, dealing shadow damage.
211** A quest in the Borean Tundra has you use one on a captured mage. The tooltip states that it 'inflicts incredible pain to the target, but does no permanent damage'. After the quest, you can get more of these, free of charge, [[VideoGameCrueltyPotential just for fun]].
212** Several mobs in the game have a "Pain Spike" ability, which inflicts instant damage on a target, but that damage wears off over time.
213* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
214** Exdeath uses the crystals to blast the heroes with Agony Beams in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyV'', but when Exdeath attacks Krile for trying to pull a BigDamnHeroes, her grandpa Galuf breaks it (and the crystal) [[{{Determinator}} through sheer willpower]]. [[spoiler:What follows is an epic boss battle and HeroicSacrifice in which Galuf manages to drive Exdeath off despite fighting at ''zero hit points'' the whole time.]]
215** In ''VideoGame/DissidiaFinalFantasy'', ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyII'''s Emperor Mateus has one of these as part of his [[LimitBreak EX Burst]]. Perform it perfectly, and he performs Entice, suspending the enemy in zero gravity as he continually blasts them with arc lighting from his hand, Emperor Palpatine style.
216* At one point in ''VideoGame/LostOdyssey'', the BigBad seems to do this to you--he gets [[FinalBossPreview tired of fighting you]] and uses a spell called "Pain Surge," dealing max damage to everyone in your party. Judging by the following cutscene, it also sends you into a coma.
217* The Shivering Isles expansion to ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion'' has a quest where you ''use'' this. Getting true answers from some people requires several uses.
218* ''VideoGame/StarControlII'' has the Excruciator, a device designed to directly stimulate the pain receptors of an Ur-Quan's brain. Unusual in that it was developed by the Ur-Quan, not for punishment or torture, but to protect against mind control by another species which had enslaved them, and was forced to break their control whenever their victims experienced extreme pain.
219** Before the Excruciator, they were forced to do things like poisoning themselves (as their hero Kzer-Za did in order to inform the rest of his race about their masters' weakness) and mutilating themselves. Causing pain without lasting damage is probably better.
220* In ''VideoGame/RiseOfLegends'', this is an ability for one of the Vinci hero units, which can be used to immobilize and damage a single target.
221* Mundus can unleash these in ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry1''. He uses them to execute [[YouHaveFailedMe failed minions]], [[spoiler:like Griffon]], and occasionally builds them into his creations, [[spoiler:like Trish]].
222* In ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'', Uldred and his fellow Abominations torture mages with this until they agree to become Abominations themselves.
223* Is ''VideoGame/SidMeiersAlphaCentauri'', there's nerve stapling, and its direct application, the Punishment Sphere which consists in injecting pain directly into the nervous system through implants. It is a fate so horrifying to be sentenced to that if you build one in a city, there won't be any riots there anymore. The downside is halving the research rate in that city. The faction leaders also have some reserved for their rivals, when they capture any.
224-->''It is not uncommon to see patients undergo permanent psychological trauma in the presence of the Sphere, before the nerve stapler has even been strapped into position. Its effect on the general consciousness of the culture is profound: husbands have seen wives go inside, and mothers their children. Dr. Xynan left the surface of the sphere semitranslucent for a reason. You can hear them in there; you can see them. It is a thing of terrible beauty.''
225--->-- Baron Klim, ''The Music of the Spheres''
226** It also works on the Progenitors in the ''Alien Crossfire'' expansion, which means their nervous system is, at least, remotely similar to that of humans.
227* This is the schtick that [[spoiler:Saul Karath]] uses against you in ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic''. The JerkAss ups the ante [[spoiler: by torturing your love interest]] if you give him an answer he doesn't want to hear. It's especially brutal if you're playing female [[spoiler:considering the long, nasty history between Carth and Saul]].
228* ''VideoGame/Wild9'' puts you in control of one of these. The Agony Beam doubles as a sort of electro-lasso and allows you to throw your enemies off cliffs, slam them into solid objects, shove them through shredders, drop them into jet engines...[[TheJoysOfTorturingMooks the list goes on and on and on.]]
229* ''VideoGame/Postal2'' gives you one in the form of the "Shock Rocket" stun gun which, when applied to a [[{{Mook}} subject]], causes them to twitch involuntarily and smoke, and then drop to the ground, still twitching, losing bladder control, and whimpering pleas like "Just finish it!" or "I can't feel my legs!" Combine the max-ammo cheat (which bumps the charge capacity up to 999, with usage consuming about 5 units per second) with the fact that the game already runs on VideoGameCrueltyPotential, and you can pretty easily see the kinds of [[EvenEvilHasStandards horrible]] (or [[YouBastard awesome]], depending on your [[VillainProtagonist perspective]]) places this can go.
230** With the AWP expansion pack, you can also get a modified Shock Rocket called simply "The Puker." It induces immediate and incapacitating vomiting with even a split second's application to a [[{{Mook}} subject]] of your choice.
231* In the ''Franchise/MassEffect'' series, the recurring power 'Neural Shock' overwhelms an organic target's nervous system with pain, immobilizing them and causing significant damage. In ''3'', Mordin zaps an STG agent with it to convince him to break protocol.
232* A favorite of many Sith in ''VideoGame/StarWarsTheOldRepublic''. The Sith Inquisitor in particular specializes in using Force Lightning to its fullest extent and gets multiple prompts to shock people for any reason.
233* Subverted in ''VideoGame/RiseOfTheReds''. The American Microwave Tank is ''supposed'' to be this, but its operators generally just crank it up to a lethal setting.
234* The SignatureMove of the Dark Oppressor from ''VideoGame/NexusClash'' is Agony Curse, which is a fire-and-forget version of this trope that lingers long after the Oppressor stops paying attention to the victim. Not that most victims live very long after being cursed, since as the '[[EvilVirtues support]]' character for demonkind, the Oppressor is usually doing this to soften up targets for its allies.
235* The TowerDefense game ''VideoGame/CanterlotSiege'' has Trixie, who fires a continuous beam of red energy to attack.
236* Marisa as the Extra Boss of ''VideoGame/YouseiDaisensouTouhouSangetsusei'' shoots "demotivation rays", wide rays that rather than kill Cirno outright like everything else in the game, they drain her motivation, the game's health point equivalent, and must be avoided as much as possible.
237* [[DemonLordsAndArchdevils Dark Oppressors]] in the ''VideoGame/NexusWar'' series have Agony Curse, which cripples the victim from the inside out with all-consuming pain, making them take more damage from everything and lose most of their effectiveness in combat. There are ways to cure it, but they're so obscure that the only options are waiting it out while not doing anything for quite some time or death.
238* In ''VideoGame/{{Xenosaga}}'', [[spoiler:Wilhelm]] whips this out within seconds of Shion telling him to go to hell.
239* ''VideoGame/DivinityOriginalSinII'': Alice Alisceon's brutal execution [[MurderIntoMalevolence caused her to rise]] as an undead TorturedMonster with an agony ''aura'', dealing [[ArmorPiercingAttack armor-piercing damage]] every turn to everyone near her.
240[[/folder]]
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242[[folder:Webcomics]]
243* In ''Webcomic/TheAdventuresOfGynoStar'', one of Gyno-Star's power is an energy beam that inflicts the pain of childbirth on her enemies.
244* In ''Webcomic/{{Endstone}}'', [[http://endstone.net/comic/issue-3-webpage-41/ the God of the Eternity Spire uses this to punish Cole]].
245* In ''Webcomic/JupiterMen'', Nathan's training drones shoot a beam that causes a painful jolt on contact but leaves no lasting harm. He has these drones chase Quintin and shoot at him to improve his manueverability and creativity with his powers. On higher settings, the drones can cause Quintin's slime arms to burst.
246* In ''Webcomic/StarImpact'', the [[EveryoneHasASpecialMove special ability]] of [[BloodKnight Etna]]'s [[NamedWeapons Happy Teeth]] [[PowerFist gloves]] is to set the opponent's nerves ablaze with every punch that connects, something that [[TheLancer Phoebe]] derides as being downright sadistic.
247[[/folder]]
248
249[[folder:Web Original]]
250* In ''Website/{{Mortasheen}}'', there is a creature called [[http://www.bogleech.com/mortasheen/bifrons.htm Bifrons]] who has this power. The creator actually said about this [[ShrugOfGod "I don't know how I came to design a mutant possum with torture-beam eyeballs"]]
251* In ''Literature/{{Worm}}'' one of the villains creates a bomb with this effect.
252** This has the [[ChekhovsGun unintended side effect]] of supercharging Taylor's pain tolerance, as she relates to the cape healing her more than ten chapters later.
253** It's sequel ''{{Literature/Ward}}'', has Aroa, who can fire lightning that induces pain ''and'' makes the victim want more of it.
254* John Lant from ''Literature/{{Phaeton}}''.
255* In ''Literature/{{Twig}}'', the rebellion against the AcademyOfEvil makes use of special bullets which cause this effect, fragmenting in the wound and inducing massive agony, in order to drive Academy warbeasts mad with pain.
256* In ''[[Roleplay/{{Glowfic}} Effulgence]]'', Stella invents an Agony Beam (even referred to as such) for the purposes of ''entertaining'' her boyfriend and producing wishcoins. Eventually the use of same becomes standard throughout the peal of Bells. Also, Brilliance had one installed for use on him, for less friendly purposes, although it eventually gets used for friendly purposes.
257* ''Website/SCPFoundation'':
258** [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-469 SCP-469]], the sound-eating "Many-Winged Angel" has feathers that inject a neurotoxin that triggers all the pain receptors in a victim, causing them to scream in agony and feed the SCP. The neurotoxin also contains stimulants that keep the victim from passing out so they can scream for even longer and provide it with more nourishment.
259** [[http://www.scpwiki.com/scp-865 SCP-865]], otherwise known as "The Gentleman's Lash". It's a handgun that inflicts psychological damage on the target, leaving them with pain equivalent to that of a gunshot to the appropriate area, but no wounds and no memory of being shot, instead, the target will rationalize the pain as the result of a non-existent incident. This is a case where the Agony beam, though nonlethal, is by no means '''harmless''' - shots to the spine leave a target paralyzed, and a point-blank headshot annihilates the target's higher brain functions. [[spoiler:It turns out that it also removes traumatic memories from the user, using those to fuel its effect.]]
260** [[https://scpfoundation.net/scp-1007-ru SCP-1007-RU]], the "Nietzsche Virus". A virus that floods every cell of the infected's body with unimaginable agony while altering their pain receptors to progressively increase their tolerance for the next stage. The victims are [[AndIMustScream left to suffer pain beyond human comprehension that cannot be reduced in any way, shape, or form]] for 36 hours at a time with theoretically no upper limit. The Foundation [[TheOmniscientCouncilOfVagueness Overseer Council]] [[WellIntentionedExtremist votes to authorize its use as an interrogation method and approves human testing for up to stage nine]].
261* PlayedForLaughs in a Platform/TikTok [[https://www.youtube.com/shorts/CPMhcYwfsiA skit]] where a man and his fiance are at the hospital to deliver their child. The doctor informs them of a new device that can transfer the pain of childbirth over to the father, which he consents to. The doctor starts the machine at twenty percent, and the mother is slightly relieved, but the father says that he doesn't feel anything different. He has the doctor turn the machine up to forty percent, and still nothing. Suddenly, the father's phone rings. On the other end of the line, his best friend groans, "Oh, man, I feel like I'm passing a kidney stone the size of a watermelon!" The father urges the friend to go to a doctor to see what's up and advises the doctor in the hospital to turn the machine up to sixty percent. At that, his friend cries out, "Oh, God, it's getting worse!", through a barely-stifled howl of pain. The father's about to respond to him but stops. A look of mortified realization creeps across his face, as he glances back to his wife, and after a moment to put two and two together, he says, "[[spoiler:Turn it to a hundred, doc.]]"
262[[/folder]]
263
264[[folder:Western Animation]]
265* ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls1998'':
266** In one episode, Bubbles is trying to prove that she's as hardcore as the other Powerpuffs-- and takes Mojo Jojo's Agony Device up on its eleventh setting.
267** Later shows up in the MusicalEpisode ''See Me, Feel Me, Gnomey'' where Gnomey uses a Force Lighting-like attack accompanied by OminousLatinChanting to eliminate the villains of Townsville as well as take away the girls' powers. When the girls regain their powers and fight Gnomey, he tries it again, though it only serves to stun them for a moment.
268* In the series finale of ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague Unlimited'', [[EvilOverlord Darkseid]] gets a chance to show off the "Agony Matrix", which... well, read the quote up above. '''Ow.'''
269** Darkseid's first appearance in ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' used his [[EyeBeams Omega Beams]] on low settings as his greeting to Supes. He had to turn it up a bit to force Superman to [[KneelBeforeZod kneel]] though. What makes this just a little bit epic is that this is his ''introduction.'' Darkseid is not attacking Superman or trying to kill him, Superman has simply asked who he is. After leaving Superman in a crumpled heap on the floor, Darkseid walks off, looks over his shoulder, and responds "''[[EstablishingCharacterMoment That]]'' [[EstablishingCharacterMoment is who I am.]]"
270* The Franchise/{{Care Bear|s}} [[CareBearStare Stare]]. Well, [[EvilCannotComprehendGood at least to]] TheHeartless.
271* Dr. Wily used one in [[WesternAnimation/MegaManRubySpears the Ruby-Spears Mega Man TV show]], incapacitating Roll, Rush, and, oddly, Dr. Light.
272* ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'':
273** Vlad Plasmius has one of these as a standard ghost ability. Danny is rather unappreciative.
274** In "Kindred Spirits", Vlad plugs Danny into a nasty-looking [[BuffySpeak zappy capsule thing]] to try to force him to morph into his ghost form. It even has a dial to increase the intensity! Once again, Danny doesn't appreciate this.
275* In the ''WesternAnimation/ThunderCats2011'' episode, "Journey to the Tower of Omens", BigBad SorcerousOverlord Mumm-Ra exhibits this ability in his OneWingedAngel form, and fully intends to use it to treat TheHero Lion-O to an agonizing death until Jaga intervenes.
276* ''WesternAnimation/GreenLanternTheAnimatedSeries'': The Red Lantern Corps have one on hand for traitors.
277* In the ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' episode "Magic Duel", a DrunkOnTheDarkSide Great and Powerful Trixie uses one on Rainbow Dash. [[spoiler:However, since she just removed her AmplifierArtifact, it only tickles.]]
278* [[TheBrute Quickstrike]] from ''WesternAnimation/BeastWars'' has this as his ArmCannon.
279[[/folder]]
280
281[[folder:Real Life]]
282* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capsaicin Capsaicin]], the chemical which makes hot peppers "hot", produces its effect by persistently activating an ion channel ([=TRPV1=]) which is directly involved in the perception of pain and scalding heat. That is, it's literally chemical pain.
283** And that's nothing compared to its big brother, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resiniferatoxin resiniferatoxin]], which is thousands of times more powerful than capsaicin. Eat 10g of this stuff? You'll go into shock and die.
284* There's a real-life weapon being tested as we speak called the Active Denial System. It uses millimeter wave radio energy to heat the surface layer of the skin, causing intense, incapacitating pain with no lasting injury. It's intended for use as a humane crowd control device (especially compared to the alternatives: tear gas, bullets, ''[[KillItWithFire flamethrowers]]''...).
285** There also seems to be a possibility that this system may come into actual use soon. Though the system appears to have taken on a more user-friendly acronym (Assault Intervention Device or AID), its function remains marginally unchanged. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_jail_ray_gun
286** Serious controversy has been raised over the question of what happens when people are too tightly packed to move, or rendered immobile by injury (Both are likely scenarios in riots and firefights), especially since the long-term effects are largely unknown, but probably not good.
287*** It has been demonstrated to cause burns in skin and if the eye were exposed the cornea would [[EyeScream quickly cook]] causing blindness.
288** All demonstrations shown so far, the pain has failed to incapacitate; it's hard to resist, but not impossible for a determined person. The same is also true of pepper spray and tear gas.
289** One occasional myth that does pop up is that metal objects worn by a target can heat up faster and cause more serious contact burns. Metal items are reflective in the microwave spectrum and sheet metal could be used as a shield.
290* The Long Range Acoustic Device AKA the Sonic Cannon is a sound-based weapon that serves a similar purpose. This is the device that was first widely publicized when it was used to avert a ''{{pirate}} attack''. You just can't make this stuff up! (In practice, it "fires" a blast of sound that, without proper protection, screws up the body's balance mechanism and inflicts some pretty serious pain.) What is interesting is that the sound is perfectly directional. The device can be set to fire out at a specific angle from the speakers. For example, if the device projected at a cone of 30 degrees, only anyone inside that cone would be affected. Anyone standing behind it would hear the device working, but the sound level they hear is only slightly louder than normal speaking volume. Anyone standing even 1 degree outside of the cone would hear the same level, but if they move even one degree into the cone, then the pain begins. Like the AID above, the use of the LRAD is highly controversial since the long-term side effects of exposure aren't known and police forces have been caught using it against peaceful demonstrations after they claimed they would not deploy it.
291** To its credit, the device is designed with a less-intense setting, making it a stronger, more precise version of a bullhorn that lets you give, say, an advancing mob, fair warning to turn around before they get the full blast.
292** The U.S. Army also uses [[LoudOfWar extremely loud rock music]] to drive out terrorists in hiding.
293*** And Rick Astley music
294*** And music designed to annoy, humiliate, enrage, or frustrate the listener, such as music discussing drugs or promiscuous sex towards strongly religious targets. Barney music (and other children's music) and music from the South Park movie are also both confirmed to have been used in the field. This can result in an AttackBackfire if they use music the target is a fan of (in one notable instance, an interrigation subject began to ''sing along'' with the heavy-metal music They were using).
295* Then there's pepper spray, which, when dispensed from riot-control guns (also used to ward off bears) count as something between Agony Beams and [[TheParalyzer paralyzers]], having a slightly shorter effective range but better takedown statistics than handguns.
296* Skunks spray victims and predators in an attempt to escape, causing either irritation or even agony. Skunk spray can be let out as either a gaseous mist or a liquid stream. The mist is very potent and can be smelled from half a mile away. The stench can cause great disgust from a mere 50 ft, and the smell clings to its victim with greater intensity depending on how long it takes for the victim to wash it off. It clings with even greater intensity to fabric or animal fur. The liquid stream, however, is twice as strong and potent, and can be smelled from over a mile away. Being sprayed by the liquid stream can put the victim in intense agony and literally stun them, especially if it is near the face (which can cause temporary blindness).
297** The active components in Skunk spray have been released to the public in recent years as a toothpaste-like gel. Already, some police services use the ''potent'' smelling gel to keep people and animals out of abandoned buildings. It's proven almost 100% effective.
298* Another US DARPA project, the Pulsed Energy Projectile, used a "low" power pulsed laser beam to vaporize a small portion of the target's surface, causing a small explosion capable of knocking the target down. One side effect noticed in testing was that the EMP generated by the plasma that the laser impact produced stimulated pain receptors, and work was underway to amplify this effect.
299** Happily, like the ADS system above, the US [=DoD=] is keen to distance itself from accusations of torture and devices that might facilitate it, so these projects aren't likely to be released into use any time soon.
300** Less happily, this effect is something that could be replicated by any real-life laser weapon set to low-power single pulse output (the PEP was effectively a low-power version of a Pulsed Impulse Kill Laser project, which did exactly what it says on the tin). In the future, "phasers on stun" won't leave someone quietly snoozing, but burnt and screaming. Lovely.[[note]]Not only that, but the acronym lends itself to dismissive terminology for the newly "pickled" victim.[[/note]]
301* A taser can be used to deliberately inflict pain, when operated in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taser#Drive_Stun "drive stun"]] mode.
302* There is also a specialized LED device that projects a beam of light that rapidly pulses random colors. Looking at the light for too long messes up your brain since your eyes can't effectively focus on the colors and then you're incapacitated from a number of nasty side effects, like cluster headaches, nausea, vomiting, disorientation, irritability, and visual impairment. The Secret Service has contemplated using this to protect the President. For example, if the motorcade is traveling down a street, and the SS are tipped off that an assailant will strike from a specific direction, all they have to do is point the device in that direction, and '''''EVERYONE''''' over 5 miles will be blinded, friend or foe alike. It's designed to be inconvenient rather than outright painful. The lights aren't so bright as to intentionally cause blindness. It's just that everything suddenly turns completely green.
303** The device, called a "dazzler", is in active use in situations where it benefits to briefly delay someone. They're sometimes used at checkpoints to discourage suicide dashes, and some prisons use them against uncooperative inmates or to quell prison riots (the idea is to startle them just long enough for the guards to reach and subdue the prisoner(s)).
304* While not in a beam form, the stings of many small insects (as well as platypuses) are made specifically for causing pain. The most painful on the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schmidt_sting_pain_index Schmidt Sting Pain Index]] goes to the Bullet Ant, named for its sting being as painful as getting shot by a bullet.
305** The worst example is probably the Irukandji Jellyfish, a relative of the Box Jellyfish. While their stings don't kill unless you don't get help (Box Jellyfish stings are more dangerous, though not by much), they cause such a drastic assault on one's pain nerves that even people ''[[FateWorseThanDeath in a medically induced coma still scream in pain]]''.
306** Coyote Peterson has deliberately stung himself with several insects including the bullet ant, but he claims that their are four things he has experienced that were even worse that the bullet ant. Being stung by a giant Asian hornet is the fourth worst, followed by being stung by an executioner wasp, followed by being bitten by giant desert centipede (which was so painful that he had to tell his crew to cut the camera and use a venom extractor), but the worst pain of all he has experienced was accidentally getting bitten by a gila monster (which is even worse than platypus venom, though doesn't last as long).
307* The Gympie Gympie, aka the [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast suicide plant]], with pain level generally agreed to be on par with Bullet Ant above, but made worse by the following facts. Bullet Ants' sting lasts for about 24 hours and subside. Gympie sting can last for ''years'' as it embeds silicone thorns that can't be broken down by the body. The neurotoxin itself is stable, and specimen picked ''a century ago'' can still deliver the sting. The generally accepted treatment for Gympie sting is to spray the affected area with diluted '''''Hydrochloric Acid''''' to neutralize the toxin and wax the area to remove as much thorns as possible. Insidiously, the toxin itself doesn't actually damage your body, just stimulates the pain receptors, like a true Agony Beam.
308* The venom from the claws of a male platypus. Doesn't kill you. Turns your pain receptors up to 11. '''Ouch.''' Oh, and no pain reliever out there to date works on the pain from platypus venom. '''OUCH!'''
309* Neuralgia and Neuropathy are essentially your own body inflicting this on you. While you have no actual damage to the body parts (typically the hands and/or feet) your nerves still send pain signals to your brain. Some are worse than others; Trigeminal Neuralgia is believed to be the very worst of them, and for extra agony beam points has been described by sufferers as similar to being struck by lightning right in the face for a prolonged period of time.
310* Another one of the most painful things that a human can possibly experience is cluster headaches, which feel like being stabbed on one side of the head around the eye, only way, way worse. People who experience them often commit suicide, and the only drugs that seem to be really effective at treating them are illegal hallucinogens.
311[[/folder]]
312----
313->''[[Literature/HarryPotter Crucio!]]''

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