__top__: Torture Galaxy

One well-known (though obscure) example is the self-published novel The Agony Nebula by K.Z. Reticuli, which explicitly references a as the setting. The protagonist, a rebel medic, discovers that the central black hole is actually a sentient entity feeding on screams. Such stories draw inspiration from the Hellraiser films (especially the cenobites' view of pain as a divine experience) and the Warhammer 40,000 universe (with its "Dark Eldar" who subsist on suffering).

: It is often indexed on music and video archiving sites like Last.fm due to the way metadata for old shock-style videos was tagged. 3. Usage in Gaming and Slang torture galaxy

Bringing down the "Torture Galaxy" required a paradigm shift in how law enforcement viewed internet crime. In the late 90s and early 2000s, local police forces were utterly ill-equipped to deal with websites hosted in Eastern Europe, paid for through Panamanian shell companies, and viewed by suspects in the US or UK. Such stories draw inspiration from the Hellraiser films

Analyze the Ranid Marines, described with "armored mandibles slick with human flesh". Usage in Gaming and Slang Bringing down the