Thank you for the dismemberment suggestionI mean I don't see why the most gruesome death for a child would be different for an adult tbh Though for children specifically, not much would disturb a reader more than sexual violence. You run the risk of going too far with that though, and you'll get people asking what in the world is wrong with you. I don't recommend that.
Other than that, I'd imagine a slow, systematic dismemberment would be the worst.
I wouldn't know, no way.
What, I am the last person anybody would think of when thinking about children's gruesome, painful, terrorizing and traumatizing deaths for the sake of someone's financial or otherwise material interests.
heheI wouldn't know, no way.
Well. You at the very least know how to cook them.What, I am the last person anybody would think of when thinking about children's gruesome, painful, terrorizing and traumatizing deaths for the sake of someone's financial or otherwise material interests.
What bizarre allegations. I would never *chomp, crunch, nomnomnom* cook children with vinegar and sugar and soy sauce and panko bread.Well. You at the very least know how to cook them.
Omg this is perfect!Burning alive is the first on the official scale of most painful deaths, if you're aiming for that. But some may think that death isn't something that bad, it releases you from suffering. If you're aiming for shock actor - leave the children alive, but wishing they were dead.
Reminds me of a film I watched when I was young. The bad guys would release POW and tell them they're free if they can escape. Soldiers would compete who could shoot the most escapees in their "firing range". The casualness of everything was kinda unsettling. I bet if there were children among the escapees, they'd probably add bonus points since they're smaller targets.You can go the opposite way and show how nonchalance the process is. Like throwing the kids into the path of a flamethrower.
"Rambo 3" did this, so did Mel Gibson's "Apokalypto" and even "Schindler's List" had a scene where this happened. In the first two films I mentioned, it was to make the viewer's heart start pumping as you wish that they succeed in escaping; in the last film, it was used to make the viewer sad as the captive accepted his hopeless fate and let it happen.The bad guys would release POW and tell them they're free if they can escape. Soldiers would compete who could shoot the most escapees in their "firing range".
I’ll consider thatYou can go the opposite way and show how nonchalance the process is. Like throwing the kids into the path of a flamethrower.