But for some reason, there are those who actually enjoy being tortured like how people were during the middle ages, albeit with the option to stop if they can't handle it anymore. These ways of torture definitely sound brutal and inhumane, even today.
Flogging is also another option, where people are hit with a leather whip or something similar, getting asked to confess to their "crime" with each and every beating. Another one is the Judas Cradle, where a person's anus is forced onto a big spike, with the pressure being increased in increments, gradually tearing the insides of the unlucky victim. An example of one of these torture devices is the Iron Chair, where the victim is strapped on to a chair filled with spikes, making the straps tighter until that person either confess to the crime or dies. And given that there were absolutely no regulations covering how and when a person should be tortured, there was literally no limit to what torturers might and could do to their victims, no matter how guilty or innocent they might be. These were dark times, as you could be a target of this vile act at any time unless you were a member of high society. The barbaric practice of using torture to extract or even force victims to confess to a crime, regardless if they were actually guilty or completely innocent. During the middle ages, punishment by torture was very commonplace across Europe. A lot of people are known to be interested in how life was during the Medieval period.