Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom player creates diabolic elevator of death
A wicked player of The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom has engineered a truly devilish (yet impressive) high-voltage death trap to take care of their enemies…in the form of an elevator.
Appropriately dubbed “The Evilvator” by its creator, this electro-torture chamber of death is a contraption that when activated, whisks the unfortunate victim into the air, traps them in a cage and deals them electric shocks over and over until they expire. The Bokoblins sacrificed in the demonstration above do not seem to stand a chance against the invention.
The towering Evilvator features stylish elevator doors made by utilizing Spring Zonai Devices. The elevator platform appears to be assembled from a Zonai Cart and several down-facing Fans that, when energized, propel it up to the top of the elevator construction. When the platform goes up, whatever poor creature is on it will find itself caged from all sides. But that’s not all, the Evilvator makes clever use of what’s most likely a combination of Zonai Shock Emitters and Hydrants to deliver continuous, intense electric shocks to the victim. Water shoots downwards from the top of the elevator, which, in reaction with the Shock Emitters, creates a high-voltage death zone.
The “mad scientist” behind this creation is u/DDoodles, who seems to have an impressive track record in engineering death traps and torture devices in Tears of the Kingdom, such as this Automatic Furnace that incinerates whatever being ends up inside as well as an Actual Guillotine that deals a swift and brutal death.
We thought we’d seen everything when Korok bullying was at its peak shortly after Tears of the Kingdom released, with Koroks being launched and crucified. Then, things escalated further when people found a glitch that leaves Ganondorf defenseless even when attached to spanking machines and whatnot, and it seems that players are continuing to develop the art of cruelty in Tears of the Kingdom with increasingly sophisticated technology being invented in the process.